The system is running in low-graphics mode, Ubuntu 16.04

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I find similar questions on askubuntu but they are unable to solve my problem. My machine was working fine and today after an update it asked for restart. I did so. After reboot, it gave me an error message which has been reported many times and can be found at





After clcking ok, I got another error message of which I did not take a screenshot.



After some time the machine asked me to login and after login, when I tried to connect to wifi, it is not able to search any wifi. Since, it is showing searching option for a long time. I tried to update many times and restarted. Same is going on in each reboot. I tried to follow instructions given at following links (but none worked for me):



  1. How to fix "The system is running in low-graphics mode" error?

  2. Ubuntu 16.04 LTS running low graphics mode | Stack Overflow

  3. Ubuntu Forums thread

Now, I don't know what else to do.



I am using Toshiba Satellite L650 laptop with dual boot.



Thanks in advance for help.







share|improve this question






















  • what was the second error message you didn't take a screenshot of? What exactly did you try from those posts and what happened? Does anything weird happen when you boot into the other OS, or only in Ubuntu? Please edit to add more information... oh and anything in ~/.xsession-errors? About the wifi, consider running the wireless info script to get more information about what's going wrong
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 8:10











  • @Zanna I didn't know at the time how can I take a screenshot, since, I didn't had other device to take picture of that. Sorry for that! I don't use other OS (windows) mostly so, I didn't try in that one. I shall write back after a trial. And I think there is no problem in other OS. ~/.xsession-errors file include the text given bellow.[1] For wireless, [askubuntu.com/questions/425155/… this script] doesn't work. Since, I used another trick which works for all above problems.[2]
    – Sanjeev Kumar
    May 24 at 17:35











  • I asked about other OS because you mentioned dual boot... have I misunderstood?
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 17:36










  • [1] openConnection: connect: No such file or directory cannot connect to brltty at :0 [2] I removed all the files from directory /var/crash/ and everything works fine in next boot.
    – Sanjeev Kumar
    May 24 at 17:38










  • Have you fixed it?
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 17:43














up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I find similar questions on askubuntu but they are unable to solve my problem. My machine was working fine and today after an update it asked for restart. I did so. After reboot, it gave me an error message which has been reported many times and can be found at





After clcking ok, I got another error message of which I did not take a screenshot.



After some time the machine asked me to login and after login, when I tried to connect to wifi, it is not able to search any wifi. Since, it is showing searching option for a long time. I tried to update many times and restarted. Same is going on in each reboot. I tried to follow instructions given at following links (but none worked for me):



  1. How to fix "The system is running in low-graphics mode" error?

  2. Ubuntu 16.04 LTS running low graphics mode | Stack Overflow

  3. Ubuntu Forums thread

Now, I don't know what else to do.



I am using Toshiba Satellite L650 laptop with dual boot.



Thanks in advance for help.







share|improve this question






















  • what was the second error message you didn't take a screenshot of? What exactly did you try from those posts and what happened? Does anything weird happen when you boot into the other OS, or only in Ubuntu? Please edit to add more information... oh and anything in ~/.xsession-errors? About the wifi, consider running the wireless info script to get more information about what's going wrong
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 8:10











  • @Zanna I didn't know at the time how can I take a screenshot, since, I didn't had other device to take picture of that. Sorry for that! I don't use other OS (windows) mostly so, I didn't try in that one. I shall write back after a trial. And I think there is no problem in other OS. ~/.xsession-errors file include the text given bellow.[1] For wireless, [askubuntu.com/questions/425155/… this script] doesn't work. Since, I used another trick which works for all above problems.[2]
    – Sanjeev Kumar
    May 24 at 17:35











  • I asked about other OS because you mentioned dual boot... have I misunderstood?
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 17:36










  • [1] openConnection: connect: No such file or directory cannot connect to brltty at :0 [2] I removed all the files from directory /var/crash/ and everything works fine in next boot.
    – Sanjeev Kumar
    May 24 at 17:38










  • Have you fixed it?
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 17:43












up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I find similar questions on askubuntu but they are unable to solve my problem. My machine was working fine and today after an update it asked for restart. I did so. After reboot, it gave me an error message which has been reported many times and can be found at





After clcking ok, I got another error message of which I did not take a screenshot.



After some time the machine asked me to login and after login, when I tried to connect to wifi, it is not able to search any wifi. Since, it is showing searching option for a long time. I tried to update many times and restarted. Same is going on in each reboot. I tried to follow instructions given at following links (but none worked for me):



  1. How to fix "The system is running in low-graphics mode" error?

  2. Ubuntu 16.04 LTS running low graphics mode | Stack Overflow

  3. Ubuntu Forums thread

Now, I don't know what else to do.



I am using Toshiba Satellite L650 laptop with dual boot.



Thanks in advance for help.







share|improve this question














I find similar questions on askubuntu but they are unable to solve my problem. My machine was working fine and today after an update it asked for restart. I did so. After reboot, it gave me an error message which has been reported many times and can be found at





After clcking ok, I got another error message of which I did not take a screenshot.



After some time the machine asked me to login and after login, when I tried to connect to wifi, it is not able to search any wifi. Since, it is showing searching option for a long time. I tried to update many times and restarted. Same is going on in each reboot. I tried to follow instructions given at following links (but none worked for me):



  1. How to fix "The system is running in low-graphics mode" error?

  2. Ubuntu 16.04 LTS running low graphics mode | Stack Overflow

  3. Ubuntu Forums thread

Now, I don't know what else to do.



I am using Toshiba Satellite L650 laptop with dual boot.



Thanks in advance for help.









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 24 at 8:09









Zanna

47.8k13116226




47.8k13116226










asked May 23 at 11:55









Sanjeev Kumar

162




162











  • what was the second error message you didn't take a screenshot of? What exactly did you try from those posts and what happened? Does anything weird happen when you boot into the other OS, or only in Ubuntu? Please edit to add more information... oh and anything in ~/.xsession-errors? About the wifi, consider running the wireless info script to get more information about what's going wrong
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 8:10











  • @Zanna I didn't know at the time how can I take a screenshot, since, I didn't had other device to take picture of that. Sorry for that! I don't use other OS (windows) mostly so, I didn't try in that one. I shall write back after a trial. And I think there is no problem in other OS. ~/.xsession-errors file include the text given bellow.[1] For wireless, [askubuntu.com/questions/425155/… this script] doesn't work. Since, I used another trick which works for all above problems.[2]
    – Sanjeev Kumar
    May 24 at 17:35











  • I asked about other OS because you mentioned dual boot... have I misunderstood?
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 17:36










  • [1] openConnection: connect: No such file or directory cannot connect to brltty at :0 [2] I removed all the files from directory /var/crash/ and everything works fine in next boot.
    – Sanjeev Kumar
    May 24 at 17:38










  • Have you fixed it?
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 17:43
















  • what was the second error message you didn't take a screenshot of? What exactly did you try from those posts and what happened? Does anything weird happen when you boot into the other OS, or only in Ubuntu? Please edit to add more information... oh and anything in ~/.xsession-errors? About the wifi, consider running the wireless info script to get more information about what's going wrong
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 8:10











  • @Zanna I didn't know at the time how can I take a screenshot, since, I didn't had other device to take picture of that. Sorry for that! I don't use other OS (windows) mostly so, I didn't try in that one. I shall write back after a trial. And I think there is no problem in other OS. ~/.xsession-errors file include the text given bellow.[1] For wireless, [askubuntu.com/questions/425155/… this script] doesn't work. Since, I used another trick which works for all above problems.[2]
    – Sanjeev Kumar
    May 24 at 17:35











  • I asked about other OS because you mentioned dual boot... have I misunderstood?
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 17:36










  • [1] openConnection: connect: No such file or directory cannot connect to brltty at :0 [2] I removed all the files from directory /var/crash/ and everything works fine in next boot.
    – Sanjeev Kumar
    May 24 at 17:38










  • Have you fixed it?
    – Zanna
    May 24 at 17:43















what was the second error message you didn't take a screenshot of? What exactly did you try from those posts and what happened? Does anything weird happen when you boot into the other OS, or only in Ubuntu? Please edit to add more information... oh and anything in ~/.xsession-errors? About the wifi, consider running the wireless info script to get more information about what's going wrong
– Zanna
May 24 at 8:10





what was the second error message you didn't take a screenshot of? What exactly did you try from those posts and what happened? Does anything weird happen when you boot into the other OS, or only in Ubuntu? Please edit to add more information... oh and anything in ~/.xsession-errors? About the wifi, consider running the wireless info script to get more information about what's going wrong
– Zanna
May 24 at 8:10













@Zanna I didn't know at the time how can I take a screenshot, since, I didn't had other device to take picture of that. Sorry for that! I don't use other OS (windows) mostly so, I didn't try in that one. I shall write back after a trial. And I think there is no problem in other OS. ~/.xsession-errors file include the text given bellow.[1] For wireless, [askubuntu.com/questions/425155/… this script] doesn't work. Since, I used another trick which works for all above problems.[2]
– Sanjeev Kumar
May 24 at 17:35





@Zanna I didn't know at the time how can I take a screenshot, since, I didn't had other device to take picture of that. Sorry for that! I don't use other OS (windows) mostly so, I didn't try in that one. I shall write back after a trial. And I think there is no problem in other OS. ~/.xsession-errors file include the text given bellow.[1] For wireless, [askubuntu.com/questions/425155/… this script] doesn't work. Since, I used another trick which works for all above problems.[2]
– Sanjeev Kumar
May 24 at 17:35













I asked about other OS because you mentioned dual boot... have I misunderstood?
– Zanna
May 24 at 17:36




I asked about other OS because you mentioned dual boot... have I misunderstood?
– Zanna
May 24 at 17:36












[1] openConnection: connect: No such file or directory cannot connect to brltty at :0 [2] I removed all the files from directory /var/crash/ and everything works fine in next boot.
– Sanjeev Kumar
May 24 at 17:38




[1] openConnection: connect: No such file or directory cannot connect to brltty at :0 [2] I removed all the files from directory /var/crash/ and everything works fine in next boot.
– Sanjeev Kumar
May 24 at 17:38












Have you fixed it?
– Zanna
May 24 at 17:43




Have you fixed it?
– Zanna
May 24 at 17:43















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