tuation: i.e. Fedora, Kernel 6.14, Wayland, I could rotate
>>> the internal screen.
>>> So when I have more time again, I will again install Fedora and probably
>>> use that for now. Only 800x600 instead of the full 1280x800 display
>>> resolution, but on 8°, tha
't get the package right, then
whoever reads it will forward it to the (probably) correct one, they
will know more about how the display works. Probably worth trying xorg
to start with. You need to run reportbug on the affected machine i.e.
on HDMI, as it collects various system information as
le GUI tool you could use instead of xrandr while
> running IceWM to try rotating the internal, or getting it to light up.
Yes, didn't use IceWM, but tried xfce without success. But since the problem
(blank internal display) starts already right after loading initial Ram disk,
I would assum
ayland, I could rotate the
> internal screen.
> So when I have more time again, I will again install Fedora and probably use
> that for now. Only 800x600 instead of the full 1280x800 display resolution,
> but on 8°, that's good enough for now.
In fallback modes, such as when
Am Samstag, 7. Juni 2025, 15:46:44 CEST schrieb Felix Miata:
> Dietrich Meyer composed on 2025-06-07 04:04 (UTC+0200):
>
> Please provide output from inxi -GSaz booted without nomodeset and with
> external display connected. It provides a friendly combination of much of
> the
Dietrich Meyer composed on 2025-06-07 04:04 (UTC+0200):
Please provide output from inxi -GSaz booted without nomodeset and with external
display connected. It provides a friendly combination of much of the information
you already provided, and may provide additional value.
> I am trying
IIRC those displays are portrait type and you need to rotate them in
> the OS. The new OS doesn't know that the portrait display isn't mounted
> this way. A German blogger also had this issue.
>
> https://www.danisch.de/blog/2025/04/25/gedrehte-displays/
Great link, seems to be v
s blank
> > (backlight still on). The HDMI monitor works flawlessly.
>
> How does the internal display work if you boot from a cold start
> without the external display?
I forgot to mention this in my original post: The internal monitor behaves the
same, whether or not the
on). The HDMI monitor works flawlessly.
How does the internal display work if you boot from a cold start
without the external display?
XFCE may handle this directly: settings-> Display, and set the rotation.
Or you might install arandr. Use it to get things set up as you like.
Then have it e
you need to rotate them in
the OS. The new OS doesn't know that the portrait display isn't mounted
this way. A German blogger also had this issue.
https://www.danisch.de/blog/2025/04/25/gedrehte-displays/
> However, when booting the installed system, I see the following:
> Grub
Dear all,
I am trying to install Debian on a mini laptop with 8" screen - the laptop is
a "noname" product from China.
The laptop is equiped with an Intel Alder Lake N100 processor:
Architecture:x86_64
CPU op-mode(s): 32-bit, 64-bit
Address si
On 6/2/25 11:27, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
On Mon Jun 2, 2025 at 3:34 PM BST, Titus Newswanger wrote:
In that case, if original poster's mini-pc won't boot without HDMI
monitor, maybe like others suggested, a dummy connector. A search on
places like Amazon for "HDMI dummy plug" finds a lot of opt
On Mon Jun 2, 2025 at 3:34 PM BST, Titus Newswanger wrote:
In that case, if original poster's mini-pc won't boot without HDMI
monitor, maybe like others suggested, a dummy connector. A search on
places like Amazon for "HDMI dummy plug" finds a lot of options. To be
honest, I had not realized su
On 6/2/25 06:47, Joe wrote:
On Mon, 02 Jun 2025 13:57:23 +0100
"Jonathan Dowland" wrote:
On Mon Jun 2, 2025 at 12:18 PM BST, Joe wrote:
Certainly the Raspberry Pi OS (closely based on Debian, formerly
called Raspbian) allows headless use.
The issue (for those machines that have it) is not t
On 6/2/25 09:05, Fred wrote:
The original poster said he "did not see at all" and didn't want to
waste the monitor power consumption.
Sorry, I overlooked that. I was so thinking "headless server"...
In that case, if original poster's mini-pc won't boot without HDMI
monitor, maybe like other
On 2/6/25 21:47, Joe wrote:
I mention the OS in case an alternative (there are) did demand a
monitor. Both ends of HDMI certainly know whether the other end is
connected, many sources will not power up unless they see a live
sink, and sinks will usually not fully power the interface unless they
On Mon, 02 Jun 2025 13:57:23 +0100
"Jonathan Dowland" wrote:
> On Mon Jun 2, 2025 at 12:18 PM BST, Joe wrote:
> > Certainly the Raspberry Pi OS (closely based on Debian, formerly
> > called Raspbian) allows headless use.
>
> The issue (for those machines that have it) is not the OS: it's the
comsumption with no
> > need to use external monitor.
> > It is possible on Raspbery but I Am afraid, that mini PCS firmwares will
> > not allow Me to boot The system at all.
>
> Use monitor emulator. Does not need external power and does not eat 20W.
To close the loop:
On 6/2/25 00:29, Mgr. Janusz Chmiel wrote:
I would like to know, if is it possible to use Debian Mate
Mate? Am I correct, that is a desktop environment?
I don't know anything about mate. With some d.e., If you configure
networking etc in a gui while logged into a d.e. then remove monitor an
On Mon Jun 2, 2025 at 12:18 PM BST, Joe wrote:
Certainly the Raspberry Pi OS (closely based on Debian, formerly
called Raspbian) allows headless use.
The issue (for those machines that have it) is not the OS: it's the
firmware (artist formerly known as BIOS). If that does not support
headles
nstall?
Default install procedure require monitor.
After install and some configuration you may not use monitor for work.
> Does build in firmware written in Assembly allow Me to simply boot The
> Debian kernel if The display will not be connected?
Servers work fine :-)
> Or unfortunately, firm
On 2/6/25 20:46, Charles Curley wrote:
You will need a monitor to install, and then some way of administering
the machine afterwards, typically an SSH server.
Many SBC do not have a monitor tor start with. It is not a problem to
have them start up with a SSH server to administer, or at worst
On Mon, 2 Jun 2025 07:29:53 +0200
"Mgr. Janusz Chmiel" wrote:
> I would like to know, if is it possible to use Debian Mate on
> mini PC with 8 GB of RAM if I will not use external monitor connected
> to provided HDMI output connector.
You did not say which mini-PC you are considering, so on
I am booting various mini-pc without a display and it is working. I've
had good success with Minisforum brand.
The UXX branded one (cost less than $100 USD)(I can't find a model
number on it) has very buggy Bios firmware. Not even an option to
auto-start upon powerup, I always hav
I will not use external monitor
> > connected to provided HDMI output connector.
>
> It depends on the specific machine, unfortunately.
>
> I've had a mini-PC that refused to boot without an attached display.
> It had a VGA port and it was possible to build a dummy VGA attachm
machine, unfortunately.
I've had a mini-PC that refused to boot without an attached display. It
had a VGA port and it was possible to build a dummy VGA attachment that
fooled the machine into thinking a display was attached. I don't know
how feasible building something like that is for HDMI
On 2/6/25 13:29, Mgr. Janusz Chmiel wrote:
It is possible on Raspbery but I Am afraid, that mini PCS firmwares
will not allow Me to boot The system at all.
What do you think?
You need to be specific what mini PC you are talking about and its
processor type.
Most ARM based single board co
display will not be connected?
Or unfortunately, firmware will recognize this fact automatically and
will not allow me to load GRUB and boot The kernel:?
I do not see at all so I want to use 20 Watts energy comsumption with no
need to use external monitor.
It is possible on Raspbery but I Am afraid
30 Jan 2025 10:11:48 +0100.
https://lists.debian.org/msgid-search/z5tcvdul9_0dt...@phare.normalesup.org
I believe that user must have choice what display manager they prefer
and it should be independent of desktop environment/window
manager/Wayland composer implementation. I found it unacceptable tha
why I mentioned VNC and RDP.
But there are two window managers, because there are two logins and the
different $DISPLAY are different physical monitors on different physical
hdmi driver hardware (the remote one is an rpi)
I expect troubles from 2 GUI logins for the same user. I am afraid that
many u
4GB RAM. I installed Debian stable, testing and unstable
but the symptoms are everwhere the same. With Debian stable I was able
to boot with a Display Manger (lightdm) but only with standard
resolution (so Nouveau or Vesa driver). When I build the proprietary
with DKMS it fails finding a dis
r are you using?
>
> I see an issues in ver. 12.6.0 started from the live image:
>
> Scaling the desktop by Settings - Display - General - Scale works
> counter-intuitive, setting it to 2x reduces everything on screen to quarter
> size,
> half height and half widt
hello friends,
I tried but found it too confusing to find where to report bugs for debian :-(
.
I see an issues in ver. 12.6.0 started from the live image:
Scaling the desktop by Settings - Display - General - Scale works
counter-intuitive, setting it to 2x reduces everything on
On 02/08/2024 20:30, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Fri, Aug 2, 2024 at 7:21 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Fri, Aug 02, 2024 at 11:35:58 +0200, Florent Rougon wrote:
Which I am inclined to believe, although I'm reluctant to try 'su -p'
for fear of creating a mess in my normal user setup:
~ % su -p
Hi,
Le 02/08/2024, Jeffrey Walton a écrit:
> emacs is notorious for that. In fact, if you install a new system, and
> `sudo emacs `, then emacs will create its own config
> directory (.emacs/) in your home directory owned by root. I quickly
FTR, the Emacs user configuration directory is ~/.emac
On Fri, Aug 2, 2024 at 7:21 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
>
> On Fri, Aug 02, 2024 at 11:35:58 +0200, Florent Rougon wrote:
> > Which I am inclined to believe, although I'm reluctant to try 'su -p'
> > for fear of creating a mess in my normal user setup:
> >
> > ~ % su -p
> > Password:
> > zsh com
Hi,
Le 02/08/2024, Greg Wooledge a écrit:
> I don't use zsh, so I don't quite understand what "compinit" means.
It is a Zsh function that initializes completion for the current
session. From zshall(1):
Use of compinit
(...)
To initialize the system, the function compinit (...) should b
On Fri, Aug 02, 2024 at 11:35:58 +0200, Florent Rougon wrote:
> Which I am inclined to believe, although I'm reluctant to try 'su -p'
> for fear of creating a mess in my normal user setup:
>
> ~ % su -p
> Password:
> zsh compinit: insecure directories and files, run compaudit for list.
> I
fxkl4...@protonmail.com wrote:
> i log in to x session as user1 on host1
> from within a xterm i want to change to user2 on host1 and run x programs
> the current way i do this is ssh user2@host1
> does using ssh on the same host use encryption
> is there another way to do this
> i feel like this h
Hi,
Le 27/07/2024, David Wright a écrit:
> > I never found an official documentation about "su -p", just found it
> > myself,
> > but I read, "su -" shall do the same. It does not.
> When you write something like this, can you accompany it with a
> reference? The essential package util-linux'
urrently active user through ACLs. Adding
another user to a number of groups may give it *permanent* access to
that devices.
The actual question is if applications running by different users should
appear on the same X11 display or switching between user sessions (using
Ctrl+Alt+F*, desktop e
On Sat 27 Jul 2024 at 23:21:06 (+0200), Hans wrote:
> I never found an official documentation about "su -p", just found it myself,
> but I read, "su -" shall do the same. It does not.
When you write something like this, can you accompany it with a
reference? The essential package util-linux's man
Some window managers are offering an option, to change the user (plasma = KDE
does it, for example.). It is also possible, to start a new X-session and
login with another user. Doing so, you have 2 X-session open.
The option is also, to change the user, or, add another user with a new
session.
On 7/27/24 12:43, fxkl4...@protonmail.com wrote:
> does ssh destinguish between "ssh host1" and "ssh localhost"
Probably the interface it uses. host1 -> eth0 and localhost -> lo. Unless
you've done something funny with hostnames or routing.
Anyhow that's my guess, and if not, someone will b
On Sat, Jul 27, 2024 at 16:43:50 +, fxkl4...@protonmail.com wrote:
> simple is better
> thanks
>
> does ssh destinguish between "ssh host1" and "ssh localhost"
Depends on how everything is configured. It can.
If you prefer 'ssh -X user2@host1' and if that works for you, then you
can use tha
simple is better
thanks
does ssh destinguish between "ssh host1" and "ssh localhost"
On Sat, 27 Jul 2024, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 27, 2024 at 15:44:51 +, fxkl4...@protonmail.com wrote:
>> i log in to x session as user1 on host1
>> from within a xterm i want to change to user2 on h
fxkl4...@protonmail.com writes:
> i log in to x session as user1 on host1
> from within a xterm i want to change to user2 on host1 and run x programs
> the current way i do this is ssh user2@host1
> does using ssh on the same host use encryption
> is there another way to do this
> i feel like this
On Sat, Jul 27, 2024 at 15:44:51 +, fxkl4...@protonmail.com wrote:
> i log in to x session as user1 on host1
> from within a xterm i want to change to user2 on host1 and run x programs
> the current way i do this is ssh user2@host1
I'm assuming you mean "ssh -X", or that you've configured the
i log in to x session as user1 on host1
from within a xterm i want to change to user2 on host1 and run x programs
the current way i do this is ssh user2@host1
does using ssh on the same host use encryption
is there another way to do this
i feel like this has been hashed over here previously
i just
On Sat, 2024-06-22 at 18:11 +1000, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
>
> On 18/6/24 00:56, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> > Keith Bainbridge wrote:
> > > On 16/6/24 23:50, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > > > On Sun, Jun 16, 2024 at 06:13:36PM +1000, Keith Bainbridge
> > > > wrote:
> > >
> > > It was late af
On 18/6/24 00:56, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 16/6/24 23:50, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sun, Jun 16, 2024 at 06:13:36PM +1000, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
It was late afternoon on 16Jun2024 that I wrote this. Possibly
18:13:36 when I pressed send. I'd reckon it wo
al time as I press send
>
> I'm confused. Your time displays (Keith) look sensible to me, given
> they are in local time for somewhere like Brisbane.
>
> The only confusing display to me is what Greg's MUA showed when quoting
> your message. The time is correct but is shown i
n
> 08:13:36 UTC What's wrong with my system clock. I've not really
> looked at the time on my originals before. I'll try to remember to
> enter my local time as I press send
I'm confused. Your time displays (Keith) look sensible to me, given
they are in local time for
On 06/06/2024 16:57, Lists wrote:
As I don't do anything remotely graphically taxing I don't need a speedy
GPU.
More powerful GPU may mean better quality of local (offline) AI
assistant. Perhaps it is too early to say that it is must have, but it
seems changes are coming.
On 2024-06-03 23:50, Felix Miata wrote:
Lists composed on 2024-06-03 22:39 (UTC+0200):
I am thinking of replacing my old workstation with a Lenovo Thinkpad P16
Gen 2.
That's a model line, not a model. It's available with multiple CPU/GPU
combinations.
You are correct. That slipped by me wh
Lists composed on 2024-06-03 22:39 (UTC+0200):
> I am thinking of replacing my old workstation with a Lenovo Thinkpad P16
> Gen 2.
That's a model line, not a model. It's available with multiple CPU/GPU
combinations.
To use it as described, I suggest to get one with only one GPU. Most problems
Hi all,
I am thinking of replacing my old workstation with a Lenovo Thinkpad P16
Gen 2. There's one thing that makes me hesitate though: on my current
laptop (Thinkpad P1 Gen 1) the external display is hardwired to a
specific port. Sadly, I have never been able to use any external di
allan wrote on 18/04/2024 13:37:
Bug report submitted. https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=1069236
Hi,
may I ask how you disabled IPv6 on these machines?
Regards,
Jörg.
Hi Allan,
On 18/04/24 at 12:38, allan wrote:
Have four Sid machines here and ssh -X has worked fine on all of them
for years. For the last several days I haven't been able to run
graphical applications over ssh from any of these machines.
Error says "cannot open display" and if
host and guest when testing.
> >
> > > Do the logs on the host ip.add.re.ss provide any further details?
> >
> > journalctl -t sshd gives this -
> >
> > Apr 18 05:29:03 server sshd[2052]: error: Failed to allocate
> > internet-domain X11 display socket.
&g
ons, are those clients or servers?
>
> Both. I've run all four machines as both host and guest when testing.
>
> > Do the logs on the host ip.add.re.ss provide any further details?
>
> journalctl -t sshd gives this -
>
> Apr 18 05:29:03 server sshd[2052]: error: Fa
: Failed to allocate
internet-domain X11 display socket.
On Thu, Apr 18, 2024 at 5:54 AM Michael Kjörling <2695bd53d...@ewoof.net> wrote:
>
> On 18 Apr 2024 05:38 -0500, from wizard10...@gmail.com (allan):
> > Have four Sid machines here
>
> In the context of these SSH ses
On 18 Apr 2024 05:38 -0500, from wizard10...@gmail.com (allan):
> Have four Sid machines here
In the context of these SSH sessions, are those clients or servers?
> ssh -vv -Y u...@ip.add.re.ss just gives "X11 forwarding request failed
> on channel 0"
Do the logs on the host ip.add.re.ss provide
Have four Sid machines here and ssh -X has worked fine on all of them
for years. For the last several days I haven't been able to run
graphical applications over ssh from any of these machines.
Error says "cannot open display" and if I ssh into the machine
$DISPLAY is indeed b
On Sun, Sep 10, 2023 at 11:49 Max Nikulin wrote:
> On 10/09/2023 16:44, Tom Browder wrote:
> > On Sat, Sep 9, 2023 at 21:06 Max Nikulin wrote:
> >
> >> You can create a mock-up and use it instead of real xclip binary.
> >
> > Sounds interesting, Max, can you show the code?
>
> Unless you need to
On 10/09/2023 16:44, Tom Browder wrote:
On Sat, Sep 9, 2023 at 21:06 Max Nikulin wrote:
You can create a mock-up and use it instead of real xclip binary.
Sounds interesting, Max, can you show the code?
Unless you need to test subtle issues like
https://github.com/astrand/xclip/issues/20
On Sat, Sep 9, 2023 at 21:06 Max Nikulin wrote:
> On 10/09/2023 06:36, Tom Browder wrote:
> > We have a Raku module that uses "xclip" during use on a computer with a
> > monitor. We need to test it with Github workflows which does not have a
> > graphics device.
> >
> > Is there any "xclip" opti
On 10/09/2023 06:36, Tom Browder wrote:
We have a Raku module that uses "xclip" during use on a computer with a
monitor. We need to test it with Github workflows which does not have a
graphics device.
Is there any "xclip" option to allow for testing without a graphics
devivce without throwin
On Sat, Sep 9, 2023 at 18:47 Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Sat, Sep 09, 2023 at 06:36:56PM -0500, Tom Browder wrote:
> > Is there any "xclip" option to allow for testing without a graphics
> devivce
…
Thanks, Greg!
-Tom
ory, not needing a physical graphics chipset to run against. You
can set DISPLAY to point to the xvfb server, and run X client programs
in that environment.
We have a Raku module that uses "xclip" during use on a computer with a
monitor. We need to test it with Github workflows which does not have a
graphics device.
Is there any "xclip" option to allow for testing without a graphics devivce
without throwing an error? Or any suggestion for a work arou
The Mailman3 mailing list forwarding, administration, and archive display all
worked here under Bullseye. The symptom I see now is that when I try to view a
mailing list archive with a web browser, I see a spinning star where I
previously saw data.
In addition to the package upgrades, I
Sorry, forgot to mention that: It did move with the USB-C-Cable. It's
a standard Amazon Basic 0,9m USB-C-to-DP-Cable, bought quite recently.
Am Do., 6. Juli 2023 um 18:18 Uhr schrieb :
>
> Stefan Schumacher wrote:
> > I have exchanged the connections - one NUC from HDMI to USB-C and the
> > othe
Stefan Schumacher wrote:
> I have exchanged the connections - one NUC from HDMI to USB-C and the
> other from USB-C to HDMI. The problem persists.
Yes, but did it stay with the NUC or move with the cable?
.1-to-DP1.4-Connector, but only got a display output of it
intermittently.
I strongly suspect that the problem is my monitor. At the moment I am
unwilling to buy a new one, since it supports 4k at 120hz and has four
display connectors. Buying a new monitor with these features would
cost me most likely
Stefan Schumacher writes:
> Hello Timothy
>
>>Do both NUC's have the same behavior or is just one of them having
> this problem? If just one of >them is having this behavior is it the
> DP or HDMI?
>
> I have just done some tests and it's only the USB-C-to-DP NUC that is
> problematic. The HDMI o
USB-C-to-DP NUC that is
> problematic. The HDMI one goes into suspend and wakes up without any
> problems. Unfortunately my monitor only does 120hz on the Display Port
> Connectors and I am by now very much used to the much smoother motion
> of 120 hz vs 60 hz. I am, according to lsmod,
uspend and wakes up without any
problems. Unfortunately my monitor only does 120hz on the Display Port
Connectors and I am by now very much used to the much smoother motion
of 120 hz vs 60 hz. I am, according to lsmod, using the i915 driver.
At the moment I am considering contacting the maintainer of th
Acer Predator XB273KGP, which has four connectors, two
> Displayport 1.4 and two HDMI 2.0. The Display port can do 120hz when
> connected via DP. One of the NUCs is connected with an
> USB-C-to-DP-Cable and the other one via HDMI 2.0 with only 60 hz. The
> other ports are used by other co
have two NUC 13, one for work and one for private use. Both are
running Debian 12 Bookworm with Gnome 43 and Wayland/Weston. My
monitor is a Acer Predator XB273KGP, which has four connectors, two
Displayport 1.4 and two HDMI 2.0. The Display port can do 120hz when
connected via DP. One of the NUCs
s and can't find it without knowing the display.
So we'll have to dig deeper into what those processes are doing.
Cheers
--
t
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
Hi.
With every back up, being whether its a restic backup hourly to another hard
drive on this machine, or an rsync backup to my synology server, this error
message continues to happen/occur. This has only started to occur since I've
upgraded t
Since upgrading to bookworm I'm having a display power management issue. I am
using XFCE. Setting the display
power management slider to blank after 5 minutes does indeed blank the display.
However, every 30 seconds or
so the monitor comes back on, then simply displays no signal and goes
On Sun, 30 Apr 2023 14:26:12 -0600, D. R. Evans wrote:
> I have TB configured so as to display incoming e-mail as plain text. They
> display correctly, BUT the font used to display the contents in the third
> pane
> is too large on the new monitor. How *exactly* do I control the
ly above
> the other.
> The second pane, the top one of these two, shows the subjects of
> received
> e-mails in whatever folder is selected in the first pane. The third
> pane,
> below the second one, is where the contents of e-mails are displayed.
>
> I have TB confi
third pane,
below the second one, is where the contents of e-mails are displayed.
I have TB configured so as to display incoming e-mail as plain text. They
display correctly, BUT the font used to display the contents in the third pane
is too large on the new monitor. How *exactly* do I control
On 7/4/23 05:29, davidson wrote:
On Wed, 5 Apr 2023 Bret Busby wrote:
On 5/4/23 03:43, davidson wrote:
It is said that if you wash a cat it will never again wash itself.
This may or may not be true: what is certain is that if you teach a
man anything he will never learn it. -- George Bernard Sh
On Wed, 5 Apr 2023 Bret Busby wrote:
On 5/4/23 03:43, davidson wrote:
It is said that if you wash a cat it will never again wash itself.
This may or may not be true: what is certain is that if you teach a
man anything he will never learn it. -- George Bernard Shaw
The "Bernard Shaw" is quite a
Bala personal wrote:
> Hello Team,
>
> Greetings. When i tried to install Debian xfce in my new computer Acer
> Aspire5, NVIDIA hardware pre installed support, i faced an issue after
> reboot the system as "failed to start light display manager. So how to
> fix this
On 5/4/23 03:43, davidson wrote:
It is said that if you wash a cat it will never again wash itself.
This may or may not be true: what is certain is that if you teach a
man anything he will never learn it. -- George Bernard Shaw
The "Bernard Shaw" is quite appropriate - it is BS.
I have been tau
system as "failed to start light display
manager. So how to fix this?
Hopefully someone who knows something about display managers will turn
up and interrogate you.
I tried the button to access termial as Alt + ctrl + f2, but it does
not have any effect on screen. Kindly do help me to fix it. Tha
Hello Team,
Greetings. When i tried to install Debian xfce in my new computer Acer
Aspire5, NVIDIA hardware pre installed support, i faced an issue after
reboot the system as "failed to start light display manager. So how to
fix this? I tried the button to access termial as Alt + ctrl
to...@tuxteam.de writes:
On Sat, Feb 11, 2023 at 07:20:17PM +0100, Linux-Fan wrote:
[...]
> ~~~
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "/usr/bin/vinetto", line 418, in
>print(" " + TNid + " " + TNtimestamp + " " + TNname)
> TypeError: can only concatenate str (not "bytes") to str
>
On Sat, Feb 11, 2023 at 07:20:17PM +0100, Linux-Fan wrote:
[...]
> ~~~
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "/usr/bin/vinetto", line 418, in
>print(" " + TNid + " " + TNtimestamp + " " + TNname)
> TypeError: can only concatenate str (not "bytes") to str
> ~~~
HAH. Python3 and its OC
section of the printed stuff also contains a Thumbs.db
file.
I'm not familiar with databases enough to know what to do, but being
able to see whats in this file in thumbnail form would sure help me to
build the next part I need. So what do we have that can display whats
in these files,
section of the printed stuff also contains a Thumbs.db
file.
I'm not familiar with databases enough to know what to do, but being
able to see whats in this file in thumbnail form would sure help me to
build the next part I need. So what do we have that can display whats
in these files,
stuff also contains a Thumbs.db file.
I'm not familiar with databases enough to know what to do, but being able to
see whats in this file in thumbnail form would sure help me to build the
next part I need. So what do we have that can display whats in these files,
from a Chinese originator?
e.
I'm not familiar with databases enough to know what to do, but being
able to see whats in this file in thumbnail form would sure help me to
build the next part I need. So what do we have that can display whats in
these files, from a Chinese originator?
File says this about one of
I have two monitors side by side and they work nicely on my KDE Plasma
desktop session. However, in SDDM display manager (login screen) the
monitors are in wrong order.
Below is a picture of the two situations. Arrows in the picture show how
the mouse cursor travels from screen to screen. You
On Thu, May 19, 2022 at 10:31:44PM -0400, Roberto C. Sánchez wrote:
> For those following along, a little while ago the problem "went away".
> That is, context menus, tooltips, and application menus now all show in
> the expected places in Firefox. I really hope that this is not a
> temporary situ
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