Quick to answer questions about finding your way around Linux Mint as a new user.
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ashtonford wrote:My answer to the current situation was to go back to mint 12 with cinnamon and everythings back to awsome. Thats the best solution till the bugs get taken care of.
Installed Mint 12 + CInnamon on my laptop, one hour in and Firefox already froze once.
Did you try disabling webgl support in Firefox?
Open Firefox. Now type about:config in address bar and in the search box type webgl. To disable WebGL, set webgl.disabled to true. Then restart Firefox.
Any changes?
Today i had a freeze whit saving a libre office document, and almost a freeze when i open a new tab whit firefox.
The last one, my system worked again after 5 a 10 seconds.
I all ready tried to go back to a mint wallpaper, moved the hot corner, replaced open jdk6 whit open jdk7 and replaced openjdk whit the oracle java 7.
Nothing worked yet for me.
kruijf wrote:Today i had a freeze whit saving a libre office document, and almost a freeze when i open a new tab whit firefox.
The last one, my system worked again after 5 a 10 seconds.
I all ready tried to go back to a mint wallpaper, moved the hot corner, replaced open jdk6 whit open jdk7 and replaced openjdk whit the oracle java 7.
Nothing worked yet for me.
Not saying it will work but have you tired replacing MDM with GDM or LightDM? Since it's the easier of the two to do I'd recommend replacing MDM with GDM just to see if it makes any difference. You can install GDM via Synaptic and during installation it will ask you which display manager you wish to run--just choose GDM from the drop down menu. Reboot, and you should end up with a GDM login splash screen like the one in Linux Mint 10. Login and see if that helps any.
To switch back to mdm just run the following in teminal:
"Humph. Choice, it is the quintessential Linux delusion, simultaneously the source of it's greatest strength, and it's greatest weakness." (All apologies to The Architect)
No not yet solved, i'm now using Gnome classic you can choose that be for you log in.
And that is working fine, i hope tomorow to test GDM whit Cinnamon.
I will post here if that is working for me.
kruijf wrote:No not yet solved, i'm now using Gnome classic you can choose that be for you log in.
And that is working fine, i hope tomorow to test GDM whit Cinnamon.
I will post here if that is working for me.
ok. But why the title of the post has the prefix "[solved]"? Someone should change that.
I finally downloaded a new .iso image of Maya/Cinnamon (32 bit in my case) from a mirror near me (USA) and did a clean install on my Thinkpad R61 that has exhibited the same system freezes that everyone on this thread has been experiencing and hasn't frozen up once yet. Rapid scrolling of a document in LibreOffice, inserting a table in LO Writer, Firefox, etc all work fine now--no freezes.
The one thing I did do, simply because I do not like MDM, is install GDM instead. I did do all the usual things that tend cause Maya/Cinnamon to freeze up while MDM was still installed just to make sure. Could this whole freezing problem be due to a corrupted .iso image file that exists on some mirrors?
I downloaded from the "Yellow Fiber Networks" mirror just for info's sake. I'll pound on the install tomorrow however, my previous install of Maya/Cinnamon from the older .iso froze up almost as soon as I opened a doc in LO Writer.
"Humph. Choice, it is the quintessential Linux delusion, simultaneously the source of it's greatest strength, and it's greatest weakness." (All apologies to The Architect)
kmb42vt wrote:
The one thing I did do, simply because I do not like MDM, is install GDM instead. I did do all the usual things that tend cause Maya/Cinnamon to freeze up while MDM was still installed just to make sure. Could this whole freezing problem be due to a corrupted .iso image file that exists on some mirrors? .
I remember that I cheked the integrity of my iso and it throw 4 errors. could be that te reason of the bug?
AlbertP wrote:Please check the md5sum of the downloaded file. If that matches, it's downloaded correctly.
How do I check the md5sum. What I have done is checked the integrity of the .iso choosing the option at the fist screen after booting the PC from an USB stick
With this program you should be able to see what the md5sum of the ISO is: http://md5summer.org/
And you can compare that with the md5sum on the download page of the Linux Mint website.
Registered Linux User #528502
Feel free to correct me if I'm trying to write in Spanish, French or German.
AlbertP wrote:With this program you should be able to see what the md5sum of the ISO is: http://md5summer.org/
And you can compare that with the md5sum on the download page of the Linux Mint website.
I'm sorry. On Linux you can right-click in the downloads folder > Open in Terminal, and then run md5sum filename.iso (replace filename with the name of the file).
Registered Linux User #528502
Feel free to correct me if I'm trying to write in Spanish, French or German.
I've checked the md5sum on the new Maya/Cinnamon .iso (32-bit) and it matches. Unfortunately, I deleted my old .iso I downloaded in May so I couldn't check that one for errors. Either way, the previous (May, 2012 download) installation of Maya/Cinnamon 32-bit on my ThinkPad R61 froze all the time and this new installation (June 29, 2012 download) appears to be rock stable. Considering how "flighty" these freezing problems are and how "iffy" the various solutions have been, my suspicion of a corrupted .iso here and there amongst the mirrors is getting stronger. I still have to restore all of my data to the laptop but none of my data includes any modification to the core system. Just /home/ directory data and .config files for Filezilla, Google Earth, Skype and my fonts. I don't see how those could possibly affect anything though.
I'll pound on this install further and report back but so far it looks good.
"Humph. Choice, it is the quintessential Linux delusion, simultaneously the source of it's greatest strength, and it's greatest weakness." (All apologies to The Architect)