@vanvugt: I haven't described a crash in Chromium. But I have switched
away from Chromium, the frequency of Gnome Shell freezes it induces
being one of the reasons. Attached is a journal from a freeze that
happened today, with Firefox and VirtualBox open (and some
filebrowser/terminal windows).
Experiencing the same maybe once every two weeks for about two years now.
When tabbing in or out of Chromium, the GUI freezes. The mouse cursor moves,
but clicking does apparently nothing.
The keyboard works: space bar to pause/resume music if a player was focused, as
well as switching to a
Update: the Unity session as well as the sessions from the packages
ubuntu-mate-desktop and cinnamon-desktop correctly handle all Fn keys.
I'm stuck with Cinnamon for now.
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Public bug reported:
Ubuntu 17.04 amd64 upgraded from 16.10 on a Thinkpad T460p, gnome-
flashback Compiz session.
The Fn keys (media keys, brightness, XF86Search, etc.) have stopped working:
all except XF86WLAN, which manages to toggle the wireless state, do nothing.
They are visible in xev:
Not sure if this is equivalent, as I run unity-settings-daemon instead
of gnome-settings-daemon (with the Compiz Unity-plugin turned off and
gnome-panel instead), but it seems similar enough.
Just upgraded from 14.04 to 16.04.1.
I drop my laptop on a dock with two vertically oriented (rotated to
Same with Ubuntu 13.10 64bit upgraded from 13.04.
Editing the menus in gnome-panel or alternative application launchers/applets
doesn't work as well as it should. There is no easy and obvious way (e.g. just
dragdrop) to move the unnecessarily spammy new categories (Sundry, System
Settings
The bug still persists as of 12.10.
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/306673
Title:
autofs timeout
To manage notifications about this bug go to:
Public bug reported:
OS: Ubuntu 12.04 amd64, Ubuntu 12.10 amd64, up-to-date Nautilus on each.
Reproduce:
Open directory with lots of subdirs (e.g. 'A...', ... , ''TRD001', 'TRD002',
'TRD003', ...), type first letter of target (e.g. 'T') to jump in that region,
then select it ('TRD003') with
Public bug reported:
OS: Ubuntu 12.04
Hardware: ThinkPad X230
Rationale: Being able to set different screen-inactive-times (-blank and lock)
when on battery vs. AC is quite useful, for example 3-5 min vs. 20 min.
Earlier versions of the power manager settings allowed this distinction, the
This bug is still present in 12.04 with Nautilus 3.4.2
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/371289
Title:
fail to delete directory over sshfs with nautilus
To manage notifications about
@Peter Silva:
Instead of editing the default rules, one should create local ones, as shown
here for hibernate and suspend:
http://askubuntu.com/questions/94754/how-to-enable-hibernation-in-12-04/
I do agree that it's poorly documented though...
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*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 653920 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/653920
** This bug has been marked a duplicate of bug 653920
resize bug (zoom in/resize window/scroll)
* You can subscribe to bug 653920 by following this link:
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 653920 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/653920
** This bug has been marked a duplicate of bug 653920
resize bug (zoom in/resize window/scroll)
* You can subscribe to bug 653920 by following this link:
Reproducible on Ubuntu 10.10 64bit (upgraded from 10.04), nvidia driver,
Compiz on.
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resize bug (zoom in/resize window/scroll)
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/653920
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Desktop Bugs, which is subscribed to eog in ubuntu.
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Yes, the bug still persists.
Moreover, the key now has a This key has no schema exclamation mark.
I'd be content with having another option to disable the hibernate button in
the shutdown menu, but I haven't found any corresponding settings yet.
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gconf: gnome-power-manager hibernate flag
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