Hi all, Please CC me in replies - I'm not on the list.
I've gotten this weird bug that seems to be something in KDE, since I am only noticing the behaviour in KDE applications. What happens is that some (not all) KDE applications take several minutes to start, then they work perfectly. For example, clicking on the k-menu button in my panel has no effect for 5 or so minutes, then the menu pops up and behaves fine. Clicking on the konqueror quick-start button in the panel has a similar effect - nothing for several minutes, then it's fine. The same thing happens if I start the kde application with the typed command. The same thing happens if I try to kill a KDE app - killing kicker, for example, does nothing for a few minutes, and my system evidently thinks kicker is still running (though it'll be frozen), because it won't start a new kicker process. After a few minutes, the process dies, then I can start a new kicker with no trouble. I'm running unstable on a laptop that has had no problems whatsoever for ages. All the other (ie non-kde) applications in my system seem to work fine, and some of the KDE applications (examples are knetwalk and konsole) work fine too. The computer is perfectly fast enough that things should start in seconds, not minutes, and it isn't swapping furiously or running the processor in the several minutes that it takes for something like konqueror to start. It seems to me that some signals in KDE (like start-konqueror, kill-kicker, open-kmenu) are getting held up somehow, and not going through to the system for a few minutes. Once they go through everything is normal. But I don't know enough to guess whether this is a real possibility or just a nice analogy. I've never seen anything like this, I don't know what I did to produce it (ie I didn't do anything weird with my KDE settings or anything), and I don't know how to diagnose and fix it. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated, Thanks! Helen -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

