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Don't forget to throw out the stubborn and test variations in themes and panels.
Don't know what you mean by this. But I don't have any weird things in my taskbar/panel.
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Does anyone know what I can do to make this stop? It's driving me insane. And there is no rhyme or reason to it, either; I've tried to reliably reproduce/provoke it many times, but it doesn't seem at all related to anything I'm doing. Just happens on its own for no reason. Maddening.
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Does anyone know what I can do to make this stop? It's driving me insane. And there is no rhyme or reason to it, either; I've tried to reliably reproduce/provoke it many times, but it doesn't seem at all related to anything I'm doing. Just happens on its own for no reason. Maddening.
In my prior post, I politely gave you a decent explanation and workaround, with no comment from you. So I'll try one last time ... First things first, ascertain that your hardware is stable: get a copy of Mint's latest .iso, burn it to a DVD or USB stick, then run your system from the live image for a while (24 hours) putting as much network & app-load on it as possible. If you'll do that and it passes ok, I'll explain the next steps.
Cheers, m4a
Linux Mint 21.3 -- xfce 4.18 ... Apple iMAC -- Lenovo, Dell, HP Desktops and Laptops -- Family & Community Support
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forcedtopicksomething wrote:Does anyone know what I can do to make this stop? It's driving me insane. And there is no rhyme or reason to it, either; I've tried to reliably reproduce/provoke it many times, but it doesn't seem at all related to anything I'm doing. Just happens on its own for no reason. Maddening.
In my prior post, I politely gave you a decent explanation and workaround, with no comment from you. So I'll try one last time ... First things first, ascertain that your hardware is stable: get a copy of Mint's latest .iso, burn it to a DVD or USB stick, then run your system from the live image for a while (24 hours) putting as much network & app-load on it as possible. If you'll do that and it passes ok, I'll explain the next steps.
Cheers, m4a
It's clearly not a hardware problem. I can't block all computer usage for 24 hours to do such a pointless task, sorry...
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, then run your system from the live image for a while (24 hours)
Perhaps an overkill verification, but I haven't seen a report that a similar run has been done with a default/stock/unmodified them with rearranged and simplified panels.
Whatever is crashing it has not been changed as far as I see. That is a criticism of technique.
It does seem like Recommend=remove and recreate all panels themed with Adwaita. Answer=too much work.
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mint4all wrote:forcedtopicksomething wrote:Does anyone know what I can do to make this stop? It's driving me insane. And there is no rhyme or reason to it, either; I've tried to reliably reproduce/provoke it many times, but it doesn't seem at all related to anything I'm doing. Just happens on its own for no reason. Maddening.
In my prior post, I politely gave you a decent explanation and workaround, with no comment from you. So I'll try one last time ... First things first, ascertain that your hardware is stable: get a copy of Mint's latest .iso, burn it to a DVD or USB stick, then run your system from the live image for a while (24 hours) putting as much network & app-load on it as possible. If you'll do that and it passes ok, I'll explain the next steps.
Cheers, m4a
It's clearly not a hardware problem. I can't block all computer usage for 24 hours to do such a pointless task, sorry...
You maybe right with your "clearly not..." opinion, but you are missing my main point: to operate a fully-configured, confirmed-working, expert-built OS+DE in system-memory without any mods of the OS+DE you have on your HDD/SDD.
It should boot up in under a minute, will run 100% in system memory, and thus will bypass your HDD/SDD with all attendant cruft. Is the panel stable under the live-system's load? If unstable, likely due to faulty memory in the <2gb range. If stable, launch some memory-hungry apps (browser, office, vs-code etc); panel still stable? if now unstable, likely due to faulty memory in >2gb range. Running too hot, ie >85C? if so, thermal problems. Then you can take it from by mounting disks/volumes ... While you're at it, take a snapshot of the system's process tree ("pstree") and later compare it with your debian-built system to track down init/racing problems.
What have you got to lose?
Cheers,m4a
Last edited by mint4all (2023-08-15 14:55:42)
Linux Mint 21.3 -- xfce 4.18 ... Apple iMAC -- Lenovo, Dell, HP Desktops and Laptops -- Family & Community Support
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