/srv/irclogs.ubuntu.com/2019/07/18/#xubuntu.txt

well_laid_lawnjonzen: you could check dmesg to see what the kernel has to say about it00:22
swift110hey all01:05
rud0lfhi01:21
=== brainwash_ is now known as brainwash
xubuntu35wHi there, I installed xubuntu on my laptop but I can't change the screen resolution because there was no dropdown list in monitor setting. Anyone could help me, please04:48
well_laid_lawnxubuntu35w:  do you know what graphics card you have in the laptop ?04:53
xubuntu35wI don't know, how do I ?04:54
well_laid_lawnopen a terminal and run the command    lspci | grep VGA04:59
xubuntu35wOkay I will try it after lunch break, thank you05:00
well_laid_lawnluck05:00
xubuntu35wI have vga compatible controller06:24
xubuntu35wI have vga compatible controller06:32
xubuntu35wdear well_laid_lawn : I have vga compatible controller06:37
well_laid_lawnxubuntu35w:  that command should let you know if it is intel,amd or nvidia06:48
xubuntu40wNow I use in my laptop, command result are : 01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: Silicon Integrated Systems [SiS] 771/671 PCIE VGA Display Adapter (rev 10)06:53
well_laid_lawnxubuntu40w:  that's an old laptop isn't it ?06:54
well_laid_lawnsis graphics are not very good06:55
xubuntu40wYes, I bought it in 201006:55
well_laid_lawntry the command   xrandr -q   that will let you know all the resolutions available06:55
diogenes_xubuntu40w, you have issues with resolution on sis graphics?06:56
well_laid_lawnthere might have been an option to install a better driver but not with sis06:56
well_laid_lawnyes he does06:56
xubuntu40wxrandr: Failed to get size of gamma for output defaultScreen 0: minimum 640 x 480, current 640 x 480, maximum 640 x 480default connected 640x480+0+0 0mm x 0mm   640x480       73.00*06:57
xubuntu40wMy issue is the display too big06:58
diogenes_xubuntu40w, this used to be a working solution few years ago, does it work now i don't know because sis is a very old graphics chip, but you can try: https://easylinuxtipsproject.blogspot.com/p/sis.html07:01
xubuntu40wunfortunately my laptop is i686, should I change the graphic card ?07:05
diogenes_xubuntu40w, but can it run 64 bit os? have tried?07:06
xubuntu40wmy laptop's os is xubuntu 32 bit07:08
diogenes_xubuntu40w, i know that but if the processor is capable of running 64 bit instructions then you can install 64 bit xubuntu.07:09
diogenes_and apply that patch from the page i gave you.07:09
xubuntu40wOkay I will check my processor first07:12
xubuntu40wDear well_laid_lawan and diegenes_ thanks for your kind attention07:13
diogenes_you're welcome07:13
xubuntu40wquit07:21
nixo__Hello! What's the supposed way to flash the cd on an usb drive? I tried with sudo `dd if=xubuntu-18.04.2-desktop-amd64.iso of=/dev/sdb bs=1M status=progress conv=noerror,sync` and it won't boot08:36
diogenes_nixo__, etcher08:37
Spass[m]You can also try "usb-creator-gtk" from the official *ubuntu repos, it should do the job just fine.08:39
nixo__Thanks, but none of them is available on the distro I'm on. With other distros usually dd works fine..08:41
Spass[m]Then download Etcher as an AppImage and run it - https://www.balena.io/etcher/08:43
nixo__etcher is based on electron? Why?! .-. Btw, I have no AppImage support, and won't run a binary blob anyway.08:43
nixo__Uh luckily using dd again worked08:44
nixo__maybe I forgot to sync the first time08:44
diogenes_nixo__, or try simply: sudo cp xubuntu-18.04.2-desktop-amd64.iso /dev/sdb08:44
nixo__diogenes: thanks :) solved!08:45
diogenes_ok08:45
Spass[m]No AppImage support? What are you running?08:45
nixo__Spass: guix08:46
nixo__wonderful distro, fsf approved. But when I need to lend a computer to others I need to use something more "standard". xubuntu is a nice compromise08:47
nixo__well, I _assume_ they are not supported, never tried honestly08:49
Spass[m]Yeah, sounds like a good solution for me. I heard about GuixSD before.08:49
Spass[m]Did they change the name from GuixSD to just (GNU) Guix recently?08:52
nixo__Couple of months ago I think, yes09:15
Spass[m]I'm just giving it a spin in my VM, let's see how it works with Xfce.09:18
well_laid_lawnthere is a #guix chat09:36
Spass[m]Yeah, sorry for the offtopic.09:40
well_laid_lawnI wasn't concerned about that, just trying to be informative :)09:42
=== jphilips is now known as jphilipz
n-iCehi19:07
puffHi.  I have a laptop running ubuntu 16.04.6 LTS and most of the gnome menu bar icons are invisible.  The menu bar is just a black bar, with the date/time in the upper right corner and an icon for the terminal window I have open in the left. It looks like the widgets are there, if I hover over a spot I get the highlighting and if I click I get the widget menu, but the icons are invisible.22:48
puffAlso, I'm not sure what I just did but I moved the terminal window so the bar at the top is off the screen.  Trying to drag it back using the scroll bar obviously doesn't work, and going to the outside of the scroll bar just resizes it.22:48
puffAh, I just figured out I must have bumped the alt key and accidentally engaged the grab and move feature.22:49
puffFixed that, still worrynig about the icons.22:49
Spass[m]hello puff are you using Ubuntu 16.04 with GNOME?22:50
puffEr, right, not gnome, it's xfce22:51
Spass[m]and changing your icon theme doesn't make any difference?22:56
Spass[m]can you post a screenshot of the issue maybe? here for example - https://imgbb.com/22:57
EickmeyerPretty sure Xubuntu 16.04 is past end-of-life.23:01
Spass[m]yup, technically ubuntu-base is still updated, so (most) security updates are still applied, but anyway it's probably not a good idea to run EOL distro, Xubuntu-specific packages will not be updated, and there is a possibility that they have some bugs/issues/security holes23:15
tomreynpuff: ^ in case you'll miss this otherwise23:17
pufftomreyn: thanks.23:19
puffOkay, so upgrade xubuntu. What's the safest way to do that?  At one point it was with apt, then people said to use the GUI, etc.23:20
Spass[m]I would use GUI, and before upgrading make a copy/backup of important files you have23:22
Eickmeyerhttps://help.ubuntu.com/community/Upgrades23:22
Spass[m]upgrades from LTS to LTS are a pretty big jump, so it's better to be prepared for a disaster (that said, it all should go smooth)23:23
Spass[m]do you use NVIDIA proprietary drivers?23:23
puffOkay, backups are always a good idea.23:23
puffSpass[m]: It should be stock.23:23
puffSpass[m]: I've messed with the NVIDIA drivers in the past, on a different laptop, I don't recall doing it with this one.23:23
tomreynhttps://github.com/tomreyn/scripts#foreign_packages could help you clean up apt / dpkg23:24
puff?23:24
Spass[m]ok, I'm asking about NVIDIA drivers because from my experience it's better to do upgrades on Nouveau open-source driver23:25
Spass[m]I had an issue once when I upgraded on proprietary and the system didn't boot properly afterwards23:26
Spass[m]I had to remove old driver from the text console23:26
Spass[m](but that could be an issue on my end, not sure)23:27
tomreynthat's the nvidia experience (TM)23:27
tomreynthis is likely to happen again if you stay on proprietary drivers until you start the upgrade.23:28
tomreynchances are this will get better in the future, though.23:29
puffSpass[m]: aha.23:37

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