On 13/10/16 16:14, George Dunlap wrote:
> On 17/11/15 23:53, Rob Browning wrote:
>> George Dunlap writes:
>>
>>> Two months ago I switched from Ubuntu to Debian Jessie, using the
>>> default install (Gnome 3, systemd, &c). Since that time, every few
>>> days the emacs UI freezes and becomes compl
On 17/11/15 23:53, Rob Browning wrote:
> George Dunlap writes:
>
>> Two months ago I switched from Ubuntu to Debian Jessie, using the
>> default install (Gnome 3, systemd, &c). Since that time, every few
>> days the emacs UI freezes and becomes completely unresponsive.
>
> If possible, could yo
On 17/11/15 23:53, Rob Browning wrote:
> George Dunlap writes:
>
>> Two months ago I switched from Ubuntu to Debian Jessie, using the
>> default install (Gnome 3, systemd, &c). Since that time, every few
>> days the emacs UI freezes and becomes completely unresponsive.
>
> If possible, could yo
On 17/11/15 23:53, Rob Browning wrote:
> George Dunlap writes:
>
>> Two months ago I switched from Ubuntu to Debian Jessie, using the
>> default install (Gnome 3, systemd, &c). Since that time, every few
>> days the emacs UI freezes and becomes completely unresponsive.
>
> If possible, could yo
George Dunlap writes:
> Two months ago I switched from Ubuntu to Debian Jessie, using the
> default install (Gnome 3, systemd, &c). Since that time, every few
> days the emacs UI freezes and becomes completely unresponsive.
If possible, could you try emacs24-lucid instead of emacs24 and see if
Package: emacs
Version: 46.1
Severity: important
Emacs is central to my developer workflow. I typically run a single emacs
frame, maximized, have dozens of files open, and also have half a dozen emacs
shell buffers open, as well as using erc (an emacs IRC client).
Two months ago I switched fro
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