Todd Denniston wrote:
Beartooth wrote, On 10/08/2008 12:49 PM:
On Wed, 24 Sep 2008 15:03:44 +0000, I Beartooth wrote:
I'm running Firefox under F8 and F9 on five different machines, and
it's
a pain on every one of them, albeit in slightly different ways; but the
differences differ, too.
The first thing they have in common is that it takes forever to
launch -- when it does launch. The second is that it mostly doesn't. It
will try, and the little blue dots will circle for a while, and the
window list on the panel will show a mark for it -- for a while.
Sometimes one or another window will flash up and disappear, usually
too
fast even to identify.
[...]
<SNIP>
There are two things I've long made a practice of moving from
machine to machine, either with scp or by sneakermail, whichever
seemed easier at the time : FEBE, and my collection of desktop
background pictures (aka wallpaper, I believe).
I had noticed a new problem with the pix, but hadn't thought to
check for it with FEBE : a lot of files a/o folders would show up in
nautilus with a padlock emblem. Lo and behold, the extension folders,
and some others, were littered all over with those blasted padlocks.
do the 'padlocks' indicate read only? [I never use those GUI file
manglers on anything but MS.]
I had also discovered that I could clear away the padlocks by
right-clicking a parent folder, choosing Properties, going to the
Permissions tab, and making changes.
(Why should there *be* permissions trouble with a file or folder,
belonging to user btth on one machine, burned to CD by that user,
Assumption, you burned the file to the CD with out putting it into an
archive file, i.e., you did not use tar or zip.
When you copied the files you (or the GUI file mangler) told it to
keep the permissions it had on the source media, and a CD is _ALWAYS_
read only if you are not using UDF(??), so the files at the
destination are read only.
use tar or zip to create an archive of multiple files which then goes
on the CD|DVD|USBdrive which you move around, it will give you less
surprises.
or learn to use `chmod u+w -R my_moved_dir`
inserted into another machine, then dragged and dropped by the same
user into some folder belonging to that user?? Is this yet another
betise of SELinux?? It didn't use to happen.)
Anyway, I applied the same method to the padlock-littered firefox
folders in my user's .mozilla -- several times, from the firefox
folder itself on down -- and the various installs of firefox on F8
and F9 did at least start launching better than before.
<SNIP>
I am running Fedora 9 / KDE 4.1 and I have no problems with Firefox on
any of my computers. Maybe your OS is corrupted?
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