On 08/11/2011 10:31 AM, Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 08/11/2011 07:27 AM, gpe wrote:
>> Another question. How up-to-date is your system? It is always good idea
>> to do an
>> yum update
>> as root and then
>> reboot
>
> Rebooting after a system update is so...so...*Windows!*
So is the error message the
> [joe@khorlia ~]$ uptime
> 09:30:56 up 57 days, 16:51, 2 users, load average: 0.76, 0.72, 0.67
> [joe@khorlia ~]$
17:43:49 up 167 days, 1:41, 8 users, load average: 0.09, 0.11, 0.13
Difficult to do much more than that with Fedora however given the 6
monthly cycle however.
A reboot is som
On 08/11/2011 07:27 AM, gpe wrote:
> Another question. How up-to-date is your system? It is always good idea
> to do an
> yum update
> as root and then
> reboot
Rebooting after a system update is so...so...*Windows!* Unless there's
a kernel update there's no need and if your DE is updated or par
On 11/08/11 14:54, Lázaro Morales wrote:
>
>> 2. Create a new user account as root and try to login
>> useradd test1
>> passwd test1
>>
The first command creates a new user account, the second sets the
password for it. Make sure you run those commands as root. (su)
If you have the new a
Thanks gpe,
> 1. Remove all gnome-shell extension and theme as root
> yum remove gnome-shell-extension* gnome-shell-theme*
> or
I don't have any extension or theme installed.
> 2. Create a new user account as root and try to login
> useradd test1
> passwd test1
>
I tri
On 11/08/11 14:14, Lázaro Morales wrote:
>
> I tried log out and log in again but nothing happen. What could be doing
> this?
>
This usually caused by incompatible theme/extension.
You can try the followings:
Press CTRL+ALT+F2 then login
1. Remove all gnome-shell extension and theme as root