On Wed, 2013-03-13 at 11:04 -0400, Máirín Duffy wrote: > In that situation my first instinct would be to go into the control > panel and poke around and see if there was something I could fix > there, and maybe search online for an answer. My first instinct would > not be to reboot the system and go into the bootloader menu - it's not > intuitive that the problem happened because of a new kernel, and > usually when I find myself in that situation it really does take me a > while to think it might be a new kernel with a broken driver. This brings the question, how do you do your update? I know I'm not he average user but I update via yum and one thing I always watch out for are kernel update, mostly because it means I'll have to reboot my machine sometime after that. So when I reboot and something does not come up, I will likely pretty quickly reboot on an older kernel to see if that's what has changed (I must confess, this is a guess since I don't remember when is the last time something broke on one of my machine with a kernel update). Pierre -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel