I also have this problem after upgrading from 10.04 to 10.10 on x86_64
(it worked fine in 10.04 with every disc I had used then). Using K3B
works. The CD which caused trouble for me is Dionysus' "Keep the Spirit"
- which is a mixed-mode audio/data CD. When I tried inserting another
mixed-mode CD it
This problem is still there in exactly the same way in Karmic. The
libffcall package version used in Karmic is the same. It still causes a
segfault during self-tests for CLISP 2.48 (and CVS), and updating
libffcall to CVS HEAD fixes it. It'd be extra cool if this package
could be updated so I ca
I'm experiencing this as well. I also see it when using the "normal"
Application Switcher (the one that fades and zooms unselected windows
and the desktop back). I cannot correlate a mouse position to the
flawed behaviour: I can leave the mouse exactly where it is, but hit
Alt-Tab a few more time
Same here; my project size was "1 h 17 min 17" of MP3 on an 80 min
Maxell CD-R, Brasero gives the free time as "28 h 55". Also on x86_64,
Ubuntu 9.10, Brasero 2.28.2, Linux 2.6.31; uname -a = "Linux zareason
2.6.31-14-generic #48-Ubuntu SMP Fri Oct 16 14:05:01 UTC 2009 x86_64
GNU/Linux". CD drive
Public bug reported:
Problem Description:
Using Perl syntax highlighting, escaped characters like \" and \n are not
recognized after using a non-special variable in a double-quoted string. An
example: $foo = "\"$1\""; this would put the first capture in a regex between
double-quotes. In this
I'm sorry, this should be filed under the package gtksourceview2
instead.
--
Perl: escaped characters not recognized after non-plain variables in
double-quoted strings and regexes
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/249910
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, w
I have noticed this also with swapping control and caps lock. Another
workaround is to enable this option specifically in /etc/X11/xorg.conf
by adding the following line to your keyboard "Device" section:
Option "XkbOptions" "ctrl:swapcaps"
This illuminates the LEDs correctly, but applies system