[SOLVED] Window borders missing. (XFCE)
Posted: Fri Nov 04, 2011 12:58 am
In the late octobers, maybe 25-30, I updated. Then later, I rebooted. I opened up my home folder from the desktop icon to find a borderless window jammed up in the top left corner.
Anyways, I've been updating and rebooting every day or so in the hopes that the problem will go away. It hasn't.
Specs on my system: I'm using LMDE XFCE 64 bit on a Dell Inspiron 1525 that I got for free. My aunt and uncle gave it to my stepfather to dispose of because they thought it was broken. I replaced the faulty power cable and vista (factory faulty) and got what is the most powerful computer in my (poor) house. It's dual core CPU running at 2GHz, 3GB RAM, and some uninspired intel graphics chip.
Specs on myself: I've been using Linux since a few years back in Ubuntu 8.04 . I've migrated around extensively. My main OS previously (and maybe still is) is Arch Linux on my netbook. I've gotten quite used to the terminal and the no-nonsense configuration. I picked it out because it is light, has a rolling release, and has up to date packages. I suggest Linux Mint as a first Linux OS to people I try to "convert" to open source users. When I got this computer, I had not yet chosen an OS to put on there. While I love Arch, it takes me quite a while to tweak it perfectly. So I looked back to Mint. I had known about LMDE for awhile (yes, I keep tabs on other distros). I tried running a Live version. To my pleasant surprise, I found it looked quite like normal Mint, and it had recent (enough) packages. Anyways, it was what I needed. However, I'm not as good at configuring Debian distros. I do all sorts of crazy things on my OSes as well. Like messing with tracking the makehuman nightly repo and compiling libraries, etc. Anyways, this could somehow be my fault and I don't realize it.
Anyways, I have tried to think of ways to fix this. In the end, there is always reinstallation of the OS. The way that I thought might work without total reinstallation is to reinstall only XFCE. I'm worried this will make it have default XFCE looks instead of Minty looks.
Anyways, I've been updating and rebooting every day or so in the hopes that the problem will go away. It hasn't.
Specs on my system: I'm using LMDE XFCE 64 bit on a Dell Inspiron 1525 that I got for free. My aunt and uncle gave it to my stepfather to dispose of because they thought it was broken. I replaced the faulty power cable and vista (factory faulty) and got what is the most powerful computer in my (poor) house. It's dual core CPU running at 2GHz, 3GB RAM, and some uninspired intel graphics chip.
Specs on myself: I've been using Linux since a few years back in Ubuntu 8.04 . I've migrated around extensively. My main OS previously (and maybe still is) is Arch Linux on my netbook. I've gotten quite used to the terminal and the no-nonsense configuration. I picked it out because it is light, has a rolling release, and has up to date packages. I suggest Linux Mint as a first Linux OS to people I try to "convert" to open source users. When I got this computer, I had not yet chosen an OS to put on there. While I love Arch, it takes me quite a while to tweak it perfectly. So I looked back to Mint. I had known about LMDE for awhile (yes, I keep tabs on other distros). I tried running a Live version. To my pleasant surprise, I found it looked quite like normal Mint, and it had recent (enough) packages. Anyways, it was what I needed. However, I'm not as good at configuring Debian distros. I do all sorts of crazy things on my OSes as well. Like messing with tracking the makehuman nightly repo and compiling libraries, etc. Anyways, this could somehow be my fault and I don't realize it.
Anyways, I have tried to think of ways to fix this. In the end, there is always reinstallation of the OS. The way that I thought might work without total reinstallation is to reinstall only XFCE. I'm worried this will make it have default XFCE looks instead of Minty looks.