@Teej: 1) It works for me. 2) It will not conflict with gdm because it
runs after the user has logged in. 3) It will not result in extra panels
(see point 6 below). 4) It has as yet always resulted in a panel that is
"normal" and not yet in one that needs to be "taken back to normal." 5)
The command can, of course, be replaced by killall gnome-panel or just
pkill gnome-panel because the panel restarts automatically. I was
experimenting with the && operator just to be on the safe side. 6) To
test all of this, when you are logged in and the panels are all working
correctly, open the terminal and try the commands pkill gnome-panel or
killall gnome-panel, and gnome-panel & separately.

@Zbych: There does not seem to be any known "solution" to this problem
yet, which is a pity. Every workaround is always "silly" from the point
of view of correctness. That is why it is called a workaround.

Saurav

-- 
visual corruption affecting several panel applets
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/439448
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