Looks like you are running optimus technology; therefore, you might want to
look at [0] configuring Bumblebee on your laptop if you will like to use
your NVIDIA Graphic card.
Of you can append the following lines to the kernel argument
nouveau.modeset=0 rd.driver.blacklist=nouveau
[0] https://
On 09/10/2016 11:11 AM, stan wrote:
I looked at the error messages I got from the start of
gnome-tweak-tool, and it complained that the gnome-shell wasn't
installed even though I do have it installed.
WARNING : Shell not installed or running
"or running"
It's trying to talk to gnome-shell over
Hello,
With my card
product: GM107M [GeForce GTX 960M]
vendor: NVIDIA Corporation
description: VGA compatible controller
product: HD Graphics 530
vendor: Intel Corporation
Using the modules:
nouveau 1519616 0
i9
On Sat, 10 Sep 2016 17:47:07 + (UTC)
Beartooth wrote:
> OK. I didn't have that app, but dnf installed it. However,
> neither info gnome-tweak-tool nor "man:gnome-tweak-tool" in Konqueror
> gives anything about using it.
I looked at the error messages I got from the start of
gnome-twe
On Sat, 10 Sep 2016 17:47:07 + (UTC)
Beartooth wrote:
> OK. I didn't have that app, but dnf installed it. However,
> neither info gnome-tweak-tool nor "man:gnome-tweak-tool" in Konqueror
> gives anything about using it.
>
> I tried the command line (twice):
>
> [btth@localhos
On Sat, 10 Sep 2016 17:47:07 +, Beartooth wrote:
> On Wed, 07 Sep 2016 11:51:34 +, Christian Stadelmann wrote:
>
>> Same as for all gnome (Gtk+ 3.x) applications: use gnome-tweak-tool and
>> change the font size or the font scaling factor.
>
> OK. I didn't have that app, but dnf in
On Wed, 07 Sep 2016 11:51:34 +, Christian Stadelmann wrote:
> Same as for all gnome (Gtk+ 3.x) applications: use gnome-tweak-tool and
> change the font size or the font scaling factor.
OK. I didn't have that app, but dnf installed it. However,
neither info gnome-tweak-tool nor "man:g
On Sat, 10 Sep 2016 12:43:36 +0100
Timothy Murphy wrote:
> In the last couple of weeks I've had a curious problem
> on my Fedora-24/KDE Thinkpad T510 laptop.
> Sound (on YouTube for example) starts up fine on Firefox,
> but then suddenly stops working after 5 to 30 minutes.
>
> The only cure I
PS: I got rid of my 2 old computers (a desk- and a laptop) and
now have just a laptop. I am not certain if I have experienced
the problem since the hardware change, but I will report, if it
should occur.
--
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users@lists.fedoraproject.org
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Timothy Murphy wrote:
> In the last couple of weeks I've had a curious problem
> on my Fedora-24/KDE Thinkpad T510 laptop.
> Sound (on YouTube for example) starts up fine on Firefox,
> but then suddenly stops working after 5 to 30 minutes.
I have had a similar problem since a couple of months (si
Sam Varshavchik writes:
Tom Horsley writes:
On Sat, 10 Sep 2016 10:20:57 -0400
Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> All-righty, this must be something about this particular named-chroot
> configuration…
In the "check the dumb stuff first" category, might want to
run memtest and check the SMART info on t
Tom Horsley writes:
On Sat, 10 Sep 2016 10:20:57 -0400
Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> All-righty, this must be something about this particular named-chroot
> configuration…
In the "check the dumb stuff first" category, might want to
run memtest and check the SMART info on the disk. Always a
chance t
On Sat, 10 Sep 2016 10:20:57 -0400
Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> All-righty, this must be something about this particular named-chroot
> configuration…
In the "check the dumb stuff first" category, might want to
run memtest and check the SMART info on the disk. Always a
chance the code got corrupted
Ed Greshko writes:
On 09/10/16 20:15, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> Can't get any more broken than a segfault at startup :-)
>
> Looking at the carnage in /var/log/messages, it broke so bad that even
systemd-coredump
> choked on itself, and failed to do whatever it wanted to do. Impressive.
>
>
On 09/10/16 20:15, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> Can't get any more broken than a segfault at startup :-)
>
> Looking at the carnage in /var/log/messages, it broke so bad that even
> systemd-coredump
> choked on itself, and failed to do whatever it wanted to do. Impressive.
>
> Booted back to 4.6.7 t
On 09/10/2016 03:23 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 09/09/16 22:37, geo.inbox.ignored wrote:
>> CURRENT DEVELOPERS MAY BE FOUND ON THE ORIGINAL TOMATO SITE AT
>> LINKSYSINFO.ORG. PLEASE POST YOUR QUESTIONS THERE.**
>>
>> PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS SITE WAS FOR TOMATOUSB BY "TEDDY BEAR". HE HAS
>> DISCONTI
Can't get any more broken than a segfault at startup :-)
Looking at the carnage in /var/log/messages, it broke so bad that even
systemd-coredump choked on itself, and failed to do whatever it wanted to
do. Impressive.
Booted back to 4.6.7 to get things going again. Don't really have much to
In the last couple of weeks I've had a curious problem
on my Fedora-24/KDE Thinkpad T510 laptop.
Sound (on YouTube for example) starts up fine on Firefox,
but then suddenly stops working after 5 to 30 minutes.
It's exactly the same with Google Chrome.
I see nothing at all odd in journalctl -b0 ;
al
On Fri, Sep 9, 2016 at 9:10 PM, Paul Smith wrote:
>>> If by autologin you mean that my computer automatically login the
>>> default user after bootup, no, I do not have autologin enabled.
>>
>> Is the login keyring password the same as your user account password?
>> if so, if they're the same then
On 09/09/16 22:37, geo.inbox.ignored wrote:
CURRENT DEVELOPERS MAY BE FOUND ON THE ORIGINAL TOMATO SITE AT
LINKSYSINFO.ORG. PLEASE POST YOUR QUESTIONS THERE.**
PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS SITE WAS FOR TOMATOUSB BY "TEDDY BEAR". HE HAS
DISCONTINUED WORK ON THIS AND THE SITE IS NO LONGER ACTIVELY MAINTA
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