/usr/lib/tracker/tracker-store causes very heavy CPU load on Debian “Buster”
After the last upgrade on:
After the last upgrade on:
On my Debian system I’ve customized my Gnome (Shell) keyboard shortcuts, via System Settings > Keyboard > Shortcuts.
After a recent update of my LMDE, the gnome-screenshot tool started making an annoying camera shutter noise every time a screenshot is taken. This is both annoying and startling (especially if you happen to be wearing earphones when taking the screenshot).
After each login, there’s certain commands that I run on specific tabs of gnome-terminal. This is a tedious process, so can this be done automatically?
How can I trigger the screen saver manually from the command line? I’m using GNOME 3.8.4 on Fedora 19, but the solution should not necessarily be specific to this distro.
Logging into a remote host using ssh -X [email protected], I successfully run gnome-terminal -e "tail -F /var/log/file" &. When I log off and then try the same thing the next day, I get this:
I just switched from the standard Gnome window manager to Openbox (still running inside Gnome) and like it a lot. However, now I need a new run dialog, e.g. the thing popping up when hitting Alt+F2 in Gnome. I see in the Openbox wiki, I can use the one from gnome with gnome-panel-control --run-dialog but maybe some one can recommend a better program for this?
How do I change the default session I get when I log in? I’m on Debian jessie. I tried changing settings on gdm3, tried installing lightdm and following this but it’s just not working.
Does named pipe for instance have it’s icon, I have a theme for GTK and when I’ve create named pipe it give icon from gtk-file.svg file or symlinks that point to that:
I need a solution for getting the current active (focused) window information on a Gnome 2 desktop. I’m mostly interested in the process running that window and window title.