I experience this behavior on a T61 so I don't think it's a Sandy Bridge
problem. I've experienced it since F14. I also use a docking station and
external display and remember back when I was running F14 I found a bug
report somewhere confirming that (at least on F14) it was related to the
external
Hi all,
I recently purchased my first SSD (a 256MB M4) and in setting it up stumbled
across all the writings about tuning SSDs for linux. One of the main things
that received a lot of attention was the filesystem alignment/erase block
stuff.
One post I read was that ubuntu's natty installer took
Hi all,
I did a fresh F20 x64 install today and yum updated it immediately
afterwards. When I yum installed emacs and tried to start it up I noticed
it's taking much longer than usual. Is anyone else experiencing this
behavior? I've never had this problem before on this box... it's an E5 Xeon
mac
, Tom Horsley wrote:
> On Wed, 9 Apr 2014 17:08:10 -0600
> patrick korsnick wrote:
>
> > When I yum installed emacs and tried to start it up I noticed
> > it's taking much longer than usual.
>
> I don't notice a problem, but I have a highly customized
&g
me up.
Thanks again for the help!
On Wed, Apr 9, 2014 at 5:41 PM, Tom Horsley wrote:
> On Wed, 9 Apr 2014 17:36:39 -0600
> patrick korsnick wrote:
>
> > Maybe I'll see if I can find something like truss on linux to see what's
> > going on behind the scenes.
>
> Th
Hi all,
Does anyone know if Gnome3 did away with the ability to set your NTP
servers in the Date and Time control panel? I remember you used to be able
to do this, but can't remember if it was on Gnome2xx or was a feature that
originally existed in Gnome3 on fedora.
Thanks!
--
users mailing lis
Hi all,
Now that I'm loving f25beta so much and refuse to go back to f24 I'm forced
to address a problem I've had for some time. Up through f24 I've had to
install the nvidia proprietary driver to be able to use more than 2
monitors on my GTX960 (if I connected more than 2 it locked up the machine
A common tweak recommended to SSD users on various distros has been to move
/tmp to RAM to avoid writing to the SSD. Adding this line to /etc/fstab has
worked fine for me on f16:
none/tmptmpfs defaults0 0
However on f17 adding this line prevents the machine from booting.
Can an
s fine. Go figure...
On Mon, Apr 2, 2012 at 3:32 PM, dexter wrote:
> On 1 April 2012 21:54, patrick korsnick wrote:
> > A common tweak recommended to SSD users on various distros has been to
> move
> > /tmp to RAM to avoid writing to the SSD. Adding this line to /etc/fstab
> ha
Hi all,
I just did a fresh f20 install in UEFI mode (no CSM) with secure boot
enabled and while it booted the USB stick fine after the initial reboot I
get an error about the bootloader not being signed and have to disable
secure boot in order to boot the machine. I did a search on Bugzilla for
the
: madhurjyaroy
> IRC Nick (irc.freenode.net) : madhurjyaroy
> --
> From: patrick korsnick
> Sent: 8/12/2014 12:08 AM
> To: Community support for Fedora users
> Subject: stock f20 bootloader not signed
>
> Hi all,
> I just did a fresh f20 i
it must be some quirk with the zbook 17 firmware :(
I'll reply with a screenshot shortly.
On Tue, Aug 12, 2014 at 10:07 PM, Chris Murphy
wrote:
>
> On Aug 11, 2014, at 12:38 PM, patrick korsnick wrote:
>
> > Hi all,
> > I just did a fresh f20 install in UEFI mode (n
On the Desktop (Gnome) spin the volume control allows setting values higher
than 100%. The KDE and Xfce spins don't allow this. I have a laptop that is
very hard to hear audio on unless using the Gnome spin and having the vol
cranked up to 150% or so. But I haven't really been able to get comfortab
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