Allegedly, on or about 31 October 2017, Jon LaBadie sent:
> Your problem seems similar to what I experienced early on with F26.
> I normally run Mate and Compiz. In my case the culprit seemed to
> be Compiz. If I selected a different window manager the problem
> did not exist.
>
> A Compiz updat
Tim:
>> Or, more like this: http://imgbox.com/wgZJYJMd
Ed Greshko:
> This is rather oldbut may be useful.
> https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/7503/how-do-i-enable-nouveau-vsync/
That seems to have done the trick. I haven't noticed the problem
recur, so far. My google searching ke
On Tue, Oct 31, 2017 at 06:16:58PM +1030, Tim wrote:
> Since updating to Fedora 26, I get a strange screen tearing effect on
> any moving image (scrolling webpages, watching live video, anything
> that moves). The effect is unnoticeable on static displayes. The
> effect is like
On 10/31/17 16:05, Tim wrote:
> Allegedly, on or about 31 October 2017, Tim sent:
>> The effect is like this diagram:
>>
>> http://imgbox.com/TqED2C76
> Or, more like this: http://imgbox.com/wgZJYJMd
>
This is rather oldbut may be useful.
https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/7503/how-do
Allegedly, on or about 31 October 2017, Tim sent:
> The effect is like this diagram:
>
> http://imgbox.com/TqED2C76
Or, more like this: http://imgbox.com/wgZJYJMd
--
[tim@localhost ~]$ uname -rsvp
Linux 4.13.5-200.fc26.x86_64 #1 SMP Thu Oct 5 16:53:13 UTC 2017 x86_64
Boilerplate: All mail to
Since updating to Fedora 26, I get a strange screen tearing effect on
any moving image (scrolling webpages, watching live video, anything
that moves). The effect is unnoticeable on static displayes. The
effect is like this diagram:
http://imgbox.com/TqED2C76
There's a portion at the top o