Thank you for your fast answer. Am 09.02.2011 12:25, schrieb Jigish Gohil: > On Wed, Feb 9, 2011 at 4:39 PM, Rolf-Werner Eilert > <[email protected]> wrote: >> Hi everyone, >> >> This is just the case when I don't know where to start :-) >> >> We are still running an older system with 4.2 based on a Suse 10.3. >> > I recommend to switch to specialized openSUSE made for Education with > LTSP and tons of educational applications built in[1]. > > http://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Education-Li-f-e
I know, I know :-) But we are not an ordinary school but a private language institute training foreign commercial languages (foreign languages secretaries, translators etc.), so we have other needs. I prefer using an ordinary Suse and installing LTSP on top of it. Currently, I'm preparing for an update with 11.3, but I have to use the periods when no students are here AND I have time for it ;-) > >> One of our clients (unfortunately, it's the one on the teacher's desk in >> one of the computer labs) sometimes (i. e. randomly) runs bust. Suddenly >> all available applications will open and close, the screen being swamped >> with windows, and no mouse and keyboard reacts. It seems as if every >> mouse movement triggers another instance of a program or another >> program. After a minute or so, everything is quiet again. >> >> Of course, I swapped the client hardware and network connection, and >> yesterday we thought everything be clear. But today, 10 minutes ago, the >> thing got mad again. >> > If you changed client hardware as well as network connection, try > logging in as another user, if the issue is with that, you can remove > the user with it's $HOME and recreate it, any settings about "Repeat > keys" will reset. Some other teachers are using this client once a week, and they experienced the same or similar issues with it, so I think it's not this one $HOME. Regards Rolf ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The ultimate all-in-one performance toolkit: Intel(R) Parallel Studio XE: Pinpoint memory and threading errors before they happen. Find and fix more than 250 security defects in the development cycle. Locate bottlenecks in serial and parallel code that limit performance. http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-dev2devfeb _____________________________________________________________________ Ltsp-discuss mailing list. To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss For additional LTSP help, try #ltsp channel on irc.freenode.net
