- now with both reboot AND shutdown I get sound every 4th or 5th start, the rest: no sound!
![Sad :(](./images/smilies/icon_e_sad.gif)
so, stays the same with Ghost 10.3 as before...
best
Achim
To me sound like an issue specific to your hardware (possibly related to hw initialization):hank2000 wrote:ok, have to revise my statements about sound and leaving/starting Xfce automatically:
- now with both reboot AND shutdown I get sound every 4th or 5th start, the rest: no sound!![]()
so, stays the same with Ghost 10.3 as before...
best
Achim
Hi mate,ASX wrote:To me sound like an issue specific to your hardware (possibly related to hw initialization):hank2000 wrote:ok, have to revise my statements about sound and leaving/starting Xfce automatically:
- now with both reboot AND shutdown I get sound every 4th or 5th start, the rest: no sound!![]()
so, stays the same with Ghost 10.3 as before...
best
Achim
try to disguish from cold reboot from hot reboot (i.e. with or without removing power).
I can be wrong, of course, I'm just asking to pay attention to the case eventually.
Chance are that you are running out of space on /tmp, if using tmpfs (ramdisk) as /tmp backend.hank2000 wrote:Hi there,
two other issues I only found out today with my GhostBSD 10.3:
- with xfburn as well as Brasero I can only burn iso-images on my ext. USB DVD with my Asus eeePC, every data project ends in a crash with a core dump in my directory--> is 1GB not enough memory for such usage like burning programs?
This one must be an entirely different thing ... not sure where to start.- also when trying to copy with Thunar, it crashes, or copies only parts, when several directory levels are copied, with Midnight Commander it works perfect on my 10.3, both with USB sticks or HDDs...USB stick is fat32, HDD is NTFS.
also it doesn t matter which USB slot I try, happens on both sides of the netbook!
1) aah yes, see: always good, if someone else has a second view; that didn t come to my mind at all (of course, THEN 1GB with all system stuff is not much)!Chance are that you are running out of space on /tmp, if using tmpfs (ramdisk) as /tmp backend.
check your fstab, eventually comment out the tmpfs filesystem, reboot and retry; that way the /tmp will be on the hard disk and not in ram.
nope, because these KDE components always want a myriad of libraries which later on cause any trouble I can t feagure out...NevilleGoddard wrote:Have you tried k3b?