Ignore the previous attachment and look at this one instead. This is what Reporter reports during play-back of a video file.
Also, research I've been doing 'round the Internet basically points to MC23 improperly inhibiting Xfce Power Manager. It works well enough to prevent screen time-out, but Suspend and Hibernate are another story. Whether this is because of LXDE, the Nvidia drivers, or what have you, I am not sure.
I looked in to Caffeine, but even with Caffeine Indicator configured to run at start-up, Caffeine itself appears to always run by default in the
Deactivated state, which means that I have to manually switch it on every time time the system starts or awakens from hibernation. I have inspected the .py files, but I'm not advanced enough in Python programming to figure out which variable to change in order to correct this. Also, based on the code, I'm not entirely sure that it was actually written to prevent
Hibernate; it might only work with
Suspend. I guess it wouldn't be the worst concession for me to switch to
Suspend if there's no helping it.
I have two questions:
Does Caffeine differentiate between a full-screen application and one that is merely in maximised windowed mode? I wouldn't want Suspend to be inhibited just because MC is maximised in Standard View. It doesn't, unfortunately.Does Caffeine even care about any of that while it's on, or will it suppress Suspend regardless of the focused application state? The latter.
Ugh!Is it impossible to get MC to play nicely with Xfce Power Manager and avoid all of this? I've honestly been at this for hours, trying to get Caffeine configured in a manner that's convenient for this set-up, but I just don't think this app is the answer. I don't normally have a keyboard and mouse connected to the machine in question; it's designed to be remote-controlled. All I really want to happen is for MC to run at start-up, for me to be able to play to it via JRemote or MO 4Media without having to remote in repeatedly or set up some (limited) application to prevent it from suspending mid-play-back, and for the system to go to sleep once play-back is over and it's been sitting idle for fifteen minutes. That sort of thing is an after-thought on Windows; I don't get why it's a veritable rigmarole here.
(Not ranting against MC in particular—I'm just frustrated with Linux right now. It's cool, but
goodness!)