Hardware - Support > Start up and Shutdown

Linux Lite 5.0 64bit , funny start up, and restart after full install,

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kissbaby3:

--- Quote from: Jerry on June 02, 2020, 02:48:57 AM ---I wouldn't worry about that at all. It's just a glitch, and will probably go away in a future update. If your pc works fine, don't let this concern you.

--- End quote ---

after reading your reply and others, i think it is a glitch and maybe my old computer monitor (tho not too old, just cheap/crappy ha ha ) .
so for now i will just keep an eye on this , so for the time being i am not going to marked this as solved yet, i will try and wait and see what the next updates bring.

 8) that being said , i learned that the firewall (firewalld)  was not set to be on when the computer starts,
so i opened the terminal and did this , and now the firewall starts up when i turn on the PC
without the quotes "sudo systemctl enable firewalld" .

now if i want to check to status of the firewalld(if its even up and running),
i type this in, without the quotes , "sudo systemctl status firewalld"  ,
and that tells me if it is running or not.

now if a person for some reason, want to turn it off, the type this into the terminal, without the quotes,
"systemctl stop firewalld" of that command dont work, then try this "sudo systemctl stop firewalld"

to turn it back on, without the quotes, again in terminal, type this in "systemctl start firewalld" and
if that command dont work this try this one  "sudo systemctl start firewalld"

hope this help some people when it comes to the firewalld, this is all i do with the firewall, i have to learn more, so not touching it
further, ha ha ,

does anyone want to add some cool tips on this firewalld thing ?.

kissbaby3:
thanks for alll the reply's and info, i'm always learning something,

Narender Rao:
Perhaps it could be any alien signal invaded into the .iso file while downloading it !!!  :P

trinidad:
If this is older ATI check the BIOS for internal graphics settings, may be under chipset. Set the default usually with older boards the GFXO is the first in line and set the frame buffer location above onboard memory if that option is available.

TC 

TheDead:
Hi!

Heya!

If I remember correctly from the older days, I think this weird display is that the display turns on and shows the video frame buffer before it's memory is initialized for the current dispay settings.
Like Jerry said, no cause for concern. An update to drivers and/or kernel usually solves this. In some cases you could see the previous output (before the reboot)... albeigth with weird colors and all garbled up though.

ADD : Some "really" old ATI (before AMD) video cards were notorious to have random "green lines" when changing display resolutions. Also, a projector am using frequently displays some blue-ish image before the wanted output, so this can also be hardware related, but does not affect usage.

ADD2 : Some Monitors or TVs will be the culprits also, trying to display an incomplete video signal for a second or two. Most have a delay before displaying an image when detecting changes to the video output to prevent this and probably a "stress" on electronic components from what I understand.

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