George N. White III wrote:
> > Is there any active device (KVM, wifi, bluetooth) between mouse and the
> system?
I don't think so, I'm using a USB mouse plugged into a USB hub plugged into the
PC.
> Make a note of the times for a normal wakeup and a "wakeup".
> journalctl lets you view records
On Thu, Oct 3, 2024 at 9:05 AM Andre Robatino
wrote:
> I'm using GNOME with a 10-minute Screen Blank and automatic Screen Lock
> disabled. Sometimes, it's not enough to move the mouse to wake up the
> display. But I can Ctrl-Alt-F1, giving the gdm login screen, and when I log
> in, I'm back to my
Hi,
I am facing the annoying problem of not having any sound in Google Chrome
or any other web browser.
All other places the sound works fine(playing an audio or video file from
disk).
Please help and let me know if any diagnostic information is needed.
--
Regards,
Sreyan Chakravarty
--
_
I'm using GNOME with a 10-minute Screen Blank and automatic Screen Lock
disabled. Sometimes, it's not enough to move the mouse to wake up the display.
But I can Ctrl-Alt-F1, giving the gdm login screen, and when I log in, I'm back
to my original session (not a new session). It happens occasional
On Oct 3, 2024, at 06:12, Andras Simon wrote:
>
> Should I still uninstall systemd-boot-unsigned?
>
> What still puzzles me is that rpm -V kernel-core-6.10.11 didn't show
> any problem, even though some files it contains were missing. I can
> still see this with an earlier fc39 kernel-core that
[For the impatient: Jonathan's suggestion worked.]
Le jeu. 3 oct. 2024 à 00:03, Jonathan Billings a écrit :
> I don’t know if this is the case for you, but I saw a lot of F38->F39 updates
> unintentionally install the “sdubby” and “systemd-boot-unsigned” packages.
There's no sdubby, but system
> On 3 Oct 2024, at 03:33, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
>
> Does this look reasonable to anyone, given I am trying to install a
> lightweight version of emacs without the gear for window managers and
> desktop environments on a Fedora Server?
>
> I just need to edit files...
>
> -
>
> $ sudo yu