Ubuntu amd64 freezes randomly
Basil Chupin
blchupin at iinet.net.au
Mon Jun 14 07:39:05 UTC 2010
On 14/06/10 11:24, Karl Larsen wrote:
> On 06/13/2010 06:58 PM, NoOp wrote:
>
>> On 06/13/2010 05:35 AM, Daniel wrote:
>>
>>
>>> Anyone? It gets really frustrating, it's the 3rd time today. Aren't the
>>> developers paying attention to this list?
>>>
>>>
>> Please bottom post on this list :-)
>>
>> This is a 'users' list as the name implies, so few developers hang out
>> here. That said; posting 3 times within a few hours apart isn't likely
>> to help either. Please realize that users on this list are from all over
>> the world& simply because someone doesn't provide an immediate answer
>> shouldn't be cause for frustration. I see that you posted at 12:58 AM,
>> Robert replied at 01:04 AM, you posted back with information on your
>> video card at 03:34 AM.
>>
>> Relax a bit& eventually (hopefully) someone will come along with an
>> assist. Have you tried the suggestions by Aaron?
>>
>> Also have a look at:
>>
>> http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/lucid/man4/radeonhd.4.html
>> <http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&complete=0&q=ubuntu+%2Blucid+%2B"Mobility+Radeon+HD+4330"&btnG=Search>
>> <https://launchpad.net/+search?field.text="Mobility+Radeon+HD+4330">
>> <https://launchpad.net/+search?field.text=dell+inspiron+1545+%2Blucid&field.actions.search=Search>
>> <https://launchpad.net/+search?field.text=dell+inspiron+1545+%2Blucid+%2Bfreeze&field.actions.search=Search>
>>
>> Point is to have a look to see if you can spot anything that may be
>> similar to your situation. Also when you boot backup, have a look at
>>
>> ~/.xsession-errors
>> ~/.xsession-errors.old
>>
>> to see if you can find anthing obvious (generally the last 5-10 lines).
>> To view them:
>>
>> $ gedit ~/.xsession-errors
>> $ gedit ~/.xsession-errors.old
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
> I am running 10.04 and it has never failed even once. You have
> a computer problem.
>
>
> 73 Karl
>
73 Karl, could you please post what you consider to be that exact
"computer problem" instead of making a sweee-eeeeping statement that the
man is having a "computer problem"?
In which part of his computer is the problem to be found? What sort of a
problem is it: is it in the motherboard, or is it in the CPU, or is it
in one of the diodes, or in one of the transistors, or in one of the
capacitors (but which one?) - please provide the necessary clue so that
the man can solve his problem.
BC
--
Those who hold and those who are without property have ever formed distinct interests in society.
James Madison
More information about the ubuntu-users
mailing list