On 2013-01-10 15:10, Les Mikesell wrote:
On Thu, Jan 10, 2013 at 2:13 AM, Paul Bijnens Paul.Bijnens@xplanation.com wrote:
That would then verify the claim that the leak is not real (the above shows the contrary, I think), and gnome programs interact with each other in much more deeper ways than you would expect.
I sort-of remember once having evolution hooked to an exchange server and the clock applet seemed to be aware of all of my exchange calendar events but it was really too buggy to use back then. Do you have any calendar settings that any gnome program knows about?
I did not have items in some calendar. I do not run Evolution, it is not even installed anymore. Maybe I had it installed at some time, but just "yum erase"-d it at some point. I've never even started it once on this workstation.
I hate calendars (with deadlines and due dates just wooshing by).
I do have the Lightning plugin in Thunderbird, just to be able to read nice formatted invites to meetings etc. And that thing marks items in my calendar.
And I do remember having difficulties to install a working version of Lightning due to 32/64 bit problems at that time.
I think had to install a 32 bit version of TB on my 64bit workstation to be able to use it then. But when TB 10 replaced the TB 2 (or was that TB 3?), I just trow out all of it, and installed the standard CentOS TB 10. Even the Lightning plugin works now too.
Maybe that was around the time when I noticed my memory problem with the clock-applet disappeared? I not sure anymore.
I just mention this because I noticed that Fred also was experimenting with Firefox 18. And until a real cause of the problem is found, everything is suspect.