Hi, I just upgraded to the newest kernel and Flash. Hulu now "grays out" when I try to go to full screen. I tried uninstalling and reinstalling the proprietary video drivers (no difference either way), so I'm guessing it has something to do with either the new Flash or the new kernel. Anyone else experiencing this problem? Thanks for any pointers. -- RonB -- Using CentOS 5.5
Ron Blizzard wrote:> Hi, I just upgraded to the newest kernel and Flash. Hulu now "grays > out" when I try to go to full screen. I tried uninstalling and > reinstalling the proprietary video drivers (no difference either way), > so I'm guessing it has something to do with either the new Flash or > the new kernel. Anyone else experiencing this problem? > > Thanks for any pointers. >Yeah - went back to an older flash version - redhat noted that this occured - another suggestion is to right click on the small screen before you go large screen and disable hardware acceleration. HTH -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: rkampen.vcf Type: text/x-vcard Size: 278 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20101111/b0ce7d70/attachment-0001.vcf>
On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 6:17 AM, Rob Kampen <rkampen at kampensonline.com> wrote:> Ron Blizzard wrote: >> >> Hi, I just upgraded to the newest kernel and Flash. Hulu now "grays >> out" when I try to go to full screen. I tried uninstalling and >> reinstalling the proprietary video drivers (no difference either way), >> so I'm guessing it has something to do with either the new Flash or >> the new kernel. Anyone else experiencing this problem? >> >> Thanks for any pointers. >> > > Yeah - went back to an older flash version - redhat noted that this occured > - another suggestion is to right click on the small screen before you go > large screen and disable hardware acceleration. HTHI went to my Trash folder and saw the other threads on this issue -- sorry to start a new one. (I don't really like the way GMail handles "discussions.") And thanks for the possible fix (disabling hardware acceleration). Is there estimated time for this Flash issue to be solved (or is this low on the priority list?). -- RonB -- Using CentOS 5.5