Well, you can edit your ~/.xmms/config file, and delete the two lines that say "player_x" and "player_y" and see if that helps.
On Wed, Jul 18, 2001 at 09:47:01PM -0500, Matthew Garman wrote: > > I'm running a self-compiled gnome/sawfish setup. I also have a > self-compiled xmms installed on my system. Anyway, the other day, I > logged into gnome after a reboot, and I couldn't get xmms to display. I > have a quick launch icon for xmms on my toolbar. When I pressed it, no > windows appeared that I could see, but my "gnome desktop guide" applet > showed that xmms was running. Furthermore, I could click on an any type > of media file in the file manager, and xmms would play it (mp3s, wav > files, even mpeg movies). I even tried 'killall -9 xmms' then tried to > re-launch xmms---no good. After explicitly killing xmms, I tried loading > it from the commandline: same result. > > I logged out of gnome, then logged back in, and I got xmms to display. So > I guess everything is okay now, but I'd still like to know what happened > to xmms. Especially if it happens again, I'd like to fix it more easily > than logging out and logging in again. > > Any thoughts? > > Thanks, > Matt > > -- > Matt Garman, [EMAIL PROTECTED] > "I'll tip my hat to the new constitution, Take a bow for the new revolution > Smile and grin at the change all around, Pick up my guitar and play > Just like yesterday, Then I'll get on my knees and pray..." > -- Pete Townshend/The Who, "Won't Get Fooled Again" > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- ___ ___ / _ | / _ \ Ari Pollak - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - www.aripollak.com / __ |/ ___/ /_/ |_/_/ Knowing Murphy's Law won't help either.