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22 votes
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Disco Elysium | Hardcore mode and ultrawide support now available
7 votes -
The Yang Gang and its bots
14 votes -
New browser on the block: Flow
23 votes -
People Make Games travels to Hong Kong to interview Blitzchung, the Hearthstone pro banned by Blizzard last year
13 votes -
Bank isn’t happy with its owner
2 votes -
Steam Lunar New Year 2020 Sale - The Year of the Rat (Now through Jan 27 at 10 AM PST)
7 votes -
Housemarque's 25th anniversary is this year, and they've put all other projects on hold to focus on finishing an unannounced game they've been working on for three years
4 votes -
Balancing act: How developers approach making games feel "fair"
6 votes -
With great tech comes great responsibility - A student guide for navigating ethical issues in the tech industry
9 votes -
A software engineer's advice for saving social media: keep it small
29 votes -
A watershed moment for protein structure prediction
14 votes -
You must time-travel to any time before 1799 and never come back. Where do you go?
The time-travel is mandatory, and you must go to any point in Earth history before 1799. You cannot time-travel back. When do you go to, and why? Inspired by a similar post.
35 votes -
Way-too-early 2020 CFB Rankings
4 votes -
Van Der Graaf - Cats Eye (1977 unreleased video)
5 votes -
Can you defeat the privacy chicken?
16 votes -
Greenpeace loses Norway Arctic oil lawsuit appeal – Oslo appeals court approved Norway's plans for more oil exploration in the Arctic
7 votes -
China to bar eleven million residents from leaving Wuhan, the city at the centre of coronavirus outbreak
26 votes -
KÅRP – Left Handed (2020)
3 votes -
Why Australia's fires are linked to floods in East Africa
4 votes -
Supreme Court has granted Sámi in the far north the sole right to manage small-game hunting on its land – and not the Swedish state
8 votes -
Carbon-neutral in fifteen years? Finland – the country with an ambitious plan
7 votes -
Hades | The Long Winter update trailer
10 votes -
Do hierarchies lead to a stronger society?
7 votes -
Boeing's woes continue: 737 Max fix slips to summer—and that’s just one of Boeing’s problems
5 votes -
NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine on the year ahead: ‘A lot of things have to go right’
10 votes -
The Hamilton Hustle
5 votes -
Why we should change Australia Day ... to the fourth Friday in January
5 votes -
Every Google result now looks like an ad
27 votes -
Ronald Reagan’s “October Surprise” plot was real after all
16 votes -
Holding a city hostage is ‘peaceful’ now? I’ve been to peaceful protests before. The gun rally in Richmond was not that.
21 votes -
Challenging projects every programmer should try
11 votes -
Tencent announces offer to acquire full ownership of Funcom
12 votes -
Hookers, Hustlers, Pimps & Their Johns
7 votes -
If you could experience anything in the past what would it be?
If you had a time machine that would let you experience the past, but not change it, what would you do?
16 votes -
DirecTV fears explosion risk from satellite with damaged battery
7 votes -
American Psycho: An oral history, twenty years after its divisive debut
7 votes -
Becoming a man
15 votes -
What are you doing this week?
This topic is part of a weekly series. It is meant to be a place for users to discuss their week. If you have any plans, goals, accomplishments, or even failures, whether they be personal or work...
This topic is part of a weekly series. It is meant to be a place for users to discuss their week.
If you have any plans, goals, accomplishments, or even failures, whether they be personal or work related, I'd love to hear about them. This is a place for casual discussion about your week, past, present, and future.
A list of all previous topics in this series can be found here.
So, what (or how) are you doing this week?
9 votes -
[SOLVED] Tech support request: Recovering from hard crashes in Linux
EDIT: Latest update This is something so rudimentary that I'm a little embarrassed to ask, but I've also tried looking around online to no avail. One of the hard parts about being a Linux newbie...
EDIT: Latest update
This is something so rudimentary that I'm a little embarrassed to ask, but I've also tried looking around online to no avail. One of the hard parts about being a Linux newbie is that the amount of support material out there seems to differ based on distro, DE, and also time, so posts from even a year or two ago can be outdated or inapplicable.
Here's my situation: I'm a newbie Linux user running Pop!_OS 19.10 with the GNOME desktop environment. Occasionally, games I'm playing will hard crash and lock up my system completely, leaving a still image of the game frozen on the screen indefinitely. The system stays there, completely unresponsive to seemingly any inputs. It doesn't happen often, but when it does it's almost always when I'm running a Windows game through Steam's Proton layer. I suspect it also might have something to do with graphics drivers, as I'll at times notice an uptick in frequency after certain updates, though that might just be me finding a suspicious pattern where none exists.
Anyway, what I don't know how to do is gracefully exit or recover from these crashes. No keyboard shortcut seems to work, and I end up having to hold the power button on my computer until it abruptly shuts off. This seems to be the "worse case scenario" for handling it, so if there is a better way I should go about this, I'd love to know about it.
EDIT: I really want to thank everyone for their help so far. My initial question has been answered, and for posterity's sake I'd like to post the solution here, to anyone who is searching around for this same issue and ends up in this thread:
- Use
CTRL+ALT+F3/F4/F5/F6
keys to access a terminal, where you can try to kill any offending processes and reboot if needed. - If that fails, use
ALT+SYSRQ+R-E-I-S-U-B
.
With that out of the way, I've added more information about the crashes specifically to the thread, primarily here, and some people are helping me out with diagnosing the issue. This thread is now less about the proper way to deal with the crash than it is about trying to identify the cause of the crash and prevent it in the first place.
12 votes - Use
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New microscopy technique shows cells’ 3D ultrastructure in new detail
7 votes -
Group AMA with developers from the Half-Life: Alyx team
9 votes -
Netflix announces The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf, an anime film from Studio Mir
@nxonnetflix: The rumors are true, a new Witcher story is in the works! The anime film, The Witcher: Nightmare of the Wolf, will take us back to a new threat facing the Continent. Brought to you by the Witcher team @LHissrich and @BeauDeMayo, and Studio Mir the studio behind Legend of Korra.
10 votes -
If you could make any event(s) in history not happen, which one(s) would you pick?
I didn't know tildes has trending topics. I'd either pick the rise of the bolsheviks in Russia (You can replace them with the mensheviks, who wanted to abide by democracy.), The division of the...
I didn't know tildes has trending topics.
I'd either pick the rise of the bolsheviks in Russia (You can replace them with the mensheviks, who wanted to abide by democracy.), The division of the HRE (A united germany in 900CE would be very consequential.) And the rise of the hapsburgs in what would be Austria-Hungary, since it meshed a dozen linguistic groups together.
13 votes -
The Dreadnought Diaries - A new series of development diaries following upcoming projects at Ninja Theory
3 votes -
Establishing a type scale and hierarchy
6 votes -
I scratch-built and kit-bashed this spaceship
22 votes -
Belarus started importing oil from Norway on Tuesday after Russia, its main oil provider, suspended supplies earlier this month
9 votes -
Plans and vision for the future of Stack Overflow
15 votes -
Terry Jones: Monty Python star dies aged 77
15 votes