To clarify, I have been running the same Arch Linux installation for many months, without a hitch. Until this event. The exact message since that time has been (on a gray screen) "Oh no! Something has gone wrong. A problem has occurred and the system can't recover. Please log out and try again." I have seen other reports online of this message, but for various purported root causes. I will reinstall Arch Linux, no doubt, unless I can fix this. Thank you, Alan On Sun, Nov 26, 2017 at 1:30 AM, Ralf Mardorf <silver.bullet@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Sat, 25 Nov 2017 22:13:51 -0800, Alan E. Davis wrote: > >It seemed to start when I tried to install Adobe-Digital-Editions > >(ADE), so I could read an ebook borrowed from the local public > >library. I installed wine, and attempted to install ADE. At the end > >of the install process, the console went into a kind of loop, with the > >same message repeated over and over in rapid succession. (I did not > >have the presence of mind to try to record this message). > > > >This through my session into a dysfunctional state, so I rebooted. Or > >restarted the display manager, I don't remember. Neither GDM nor > >Lightdm have started again, in a number of days. I was able to start > >i3 and xfce4, through startx with correct lines in .xinitrc. > > > >I uninstalled wine and ADE, then recently tried again to reinstall, > >with the thought this experience may have been a fluke. The same > >exact message popped up when executing "wine install.exe". > >[snip] > >I have now installed manjaro and redcore, on the same laptop. > >[snip] > > Actually you don't have installed Arch Linux? > > >Does this description make any sense to someone? > > No, it doesn't make sense to me. At least consider to post this "exact > message". However, there's no plausible reason that installing > something odd by wine, could affect your Linux install. > > Perhaps Manjaro is broken. Consider to install Arch Linux. > -- [Fill in the blanks] The use of corrupt manipulations and blatant rhetorical ploys ...--- outright lying, flagwaving, personal attacks, setting up phony alternatives, misdirection, jargon-mongering, evading key issues, feigning disinterested objectivity, willful misunderstanding of other points of view---suggests that ... lacks both credibility and evidence. ---- Edward Tufte (in context of making presentations)