First check if your kernel got updated - it may not have picked up/remained in sync with the options from your previous kernel. If so, try booting the old one. Life still upside-down? that was the easy path.. Your update left you with a video driver that can no longer find a GPU - Gnome3 requires accelerated video, the fallback looks like Gnome2. The video and mixed-up keyboard(s) leads me to think you are going to have to clean out your borked* /etc/X11/xorg.conf & friends. I would put what you have aside and try a clean regeneration of your X - once you get it restored to the way you like, back it up ;) *your upgrade may have saved your original xorg.conf - look for that too unless debian does this differently too, Hans? Going forward, keep in mind that tools like apt & yum support typical configurations - once you setup a complex configuration, you also need to be able to recreate it after upgrades (which tend to restore the conventional) good luck On Mon, Mar 3, 2014 at 7:24 PM, Mark Phillips wrote: > I am running Debian testing on my laptop. I use my laptop in two > configurations - stand alone and with an external monitor and bluetooth > keyboard and mouse. Everything was working in that I could switch back and > forth as needed. > > I then had a need to write a bunch of documents/emails in German so I > tried to add a German keyboard mapping and dictionary to the system. I was > successful and could switch back and forth between German and English in > LibreOffice and Gmail using the external keyboard. > > I then ran an aptitude update and then an upgrade and the world collapsed. > > * I no longer have gnome 3, but a fall back version of gnome 2. > > * I can type correctly with the external keyboard, but the keyboard on the > laptop is all messed up. The keys do not type what is printed on the keys. > > * I don't have a German keyboard mapping any more. > > I googled for some solutions, ran some dpkg-reconfigures but I just cannot > get the laptop keyboard to work properly, nor get back to gnome 3. When I > run an aptitude update and then upgrade now, I get this > > # aptitude upgrade > Resolving dependencies... > open: 8922; closed: 14679; defer: 68; conflict: 194 > > and the conflicts are never resolved - the numbers just keep changing and > the cpus are pegged at 100%. > > apt-get upgrade shows many packages to be upgraded, and does not report > any dependency issues. > > Should I try apt-get upgrade to see if it fixes the problem? How do I go > about fixing the keyboard and gnome 3 issues? > > Thanks, > > Mark > > > > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss >