I just built myself a new PC and reinstalled Mint, but with every application now the sound fades in over a couple of seconds when it starts. I can't see any obvious settings that would cause this or work out why this would happen with a new motherboard so I'm hoping someone can point me in the right direction.
Thanks, I'll give it a go. As you say there's no real need for power management on a desktop, especially as I usually either have music, video or games running
I've been having issues with annoying short (ca. 1 sec.) fade-ins after a few seconds of silence in audio files (I'm using language teaching materials) and so the spoken material in those files isn't fully uttered for the students to hear - most annoying!!!
I followed the tips in this thread and I even removed power management from the startup apps, but to no avail. I'm STILL having the same annoying fad-ins after a short silence in the audio.
At the moment, I'm using Mint 19.3 Mate on an ASUS VivoBook Flip 14 laptop (Intel i7 8th gen) NVidia Geforce 930MX.
Thanks for your reply. I'll keep these things in mind should I encounter any misbehaviour from the beast.
There's quite a few things about the more recent iterations of Mint that leave me scratching my head and wondering about what the hell is going on. I guess the mint 17.3 benchmark has yet to be reached again.
There's quite a few things about the more recent iterations of Mint that leave me scratching my head and wondering about what the hell is going on. I guess the mint 17.3 benchmark has yet to be reached again.
I've read many posts from users that think the same. There's just so much that has changed since then, I couldn't even tell you how much might be Mint's fault. Things like the newer Python and newer GTK+ deprecated a lot of things that users enjoyed. Not to mention many apps from back then becoming abandonware.
But it's the same everywhere. When I was on Windows, I taught myself to program in Visual Basic 6. Just when I got really comfortable using it, it was replaced with VB.NET. I briefly checked the differences and then gave up on programming at that time. Still smacking myself for that decision!
Indeed. I'm a bit miffed (putting it lightly) that many of the themes I had used up till 17.3 are now impossible to use with Compiz. I miss those Mac Aqua themes with the pearly blue buttons (with wobbly windows)!!
Is there any indication that the Mint boys are getting their act together any time soon in a timely manner???
Well, they've got their act together as far as I'm concerned.
I found this and this for your Aqua wish, but as usual, it GTK2 only. Someone would need to port it to GTK3 for it to work on any modern Linux OS. I'm still using Mint 18.3 where that would work. I'm not certain about the 19 versions. It certainly won't work on 20. And the second link is for KDE, which Mint doesn't ship with anymore. It's possible it would work on other desktop environments, although that's beyond my knowledge.
How does one port to GTK 3?? Is it overly technical that requires years of study or can one teach oneself in a relatively short time?
As far as I know, by rewriting all the old code. For example, I use the Cinnamox-Rhino theme. Because my system is still mostly GTK2, the main theme file starts with this:
For myself, I found it best to just to learn to live with an existing theme , which also includes finding one I like enough, than to try to do multiple alterations to one. There are so many out there. The forum user smurphos has made many, some (most?) of which are here: https://github.com/smurphos/cinnamox_themes
Scroll down on that page for plenty of screenshots. Most, if not all of those are available via the cinnamon-spices doohicky if you're using Cinnamon. I use Xfce myself, and had no issues using the Cinnamox-Rhino theme. I just had to manually install it.