> First option is since you've already got VirtualBox setup, setup a VM
for Skype and other tricky software.

I already tried following numerous forums about getting microphone & webcam
to work in VirtualBox, some people have been successful but I just couldn't
get it to work for WinXP or Ubuntu guests, maybe since I'm using ALSA
instead of PulseAudio. So I'll give up for now and stick with native Skype
on Linux.


> Flash is EVERYWHERE, no joke.

Yeah I know, I use Flashblock in my browser to keep Flash at bay.


> file bugs in a tracker over sending an issue to a mailing list.

No worries, but should I report the bug to Debian or to the apps (Inkscape
and KDE/Kate), since I am technically using outdated versions of these
software?


Cheers,
Shervin Emami.
http://www.shervinemami.info/openCV.html


On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 12:36 AM, Rubin Abdi <ru...@starset.net> wrote:

> Shervin Emami wrote, On 2013-07-15 00:25:
> > Unfortunately I need Skype, VirtualBox, Oracle JDK and NVIDIA CUDA
> Toolkit,
> > I need those many times each day for my work as a remote developer. I'd
> > love to get rid of Flash, so just now I switched YouTube to use WebM
> > instead (go to "http://www.youtube.com/html5";) as a start. But when I
> > experience browser crashes, it's not while doing anything strange like
> > watching youtube so I don't think Flash is my problem. Maybe when Dolphin
> > or Plasma or Iceweasel crash it really is a problem with my RAM hardware
> (I
> > put 16GB RAM in my laptop since i often build Android from source and
> often
> > use WinXP through VirtualBox), possibly related to the fact I use 5GB of
> > RAM as a ramdisk where I do lots of my temp stuff in.
>
> First option is since you've already got VirtualBox setup, setup a VM
> for Skype and other tricky software.
>
> Flash is EVERYWHERE, no joke. When you're running your web browser, open
> up a terminal window and run top (or better yet htop) and sort by CPU
> usage. You'll see Flash pop up a bunch, not just YouTube vids. There are
> some great plugins that'll ask you before starting up any Flash content,
> might be worth checking out.
>
> If you want to test your ram, apt-get install memtest86+, reboot, select
> it in GRUB, and let that thing run over night.
>
> > For the repeatable bugs I found in Kate & Inkscape, you guys convinced
> me I
> > should file the bug reports and then find ways to live around the bugs
> for
> > the near future. I sent a message to this group recently about the Kate
> > crash because I wasn't sure how to report it, but no-one replied: "
> > http://lists.debian.org/debian-kde/2013/06/msg00014.html";. For the
> Inkscape
> > crash i tested it on Mint KDE 14, Mint KDE 13 and ArchLinux and none of
> > those crashed, only Debian Stable, and only while using OpenGL as the
> KWin
> > renderer (ie: it doesn't crash while using XRender), so I'm also a bit
> > confused about whether to file a bug to Debian or to Inkscape, since it
> > seems to have been fixed in recent versions of Inkscape.
>
> Unless told specifically to do so by a project community, file bugs in a
> tracker over sending an issue to a mailing list. Mailing lists are good
> for disucssing current thing, bug trackers are good for recording a
> history and it's eventually resolution (or ignorance). Unless you want
> to ask a community if you shouldn't file a bug (never ask if you should,
> because you'll fall into that no one will reply trap).
>
> --
> Rubin
> ru...@starset.net
>
>

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