+++ This bug was initially created as a clone of Bug #213283 +++ Description of problem: I have seen this mainly on an x86_64 {AMD AM2} machine. Each time it occurs, the buttons/elements in the panel {ie the applications menu, places, System, and the web browser, office {etc} icons would be inactive, but the mouse is active - moving around the screen OK. If I already had a gnome-terminal open, I could click in it and do top, kill etc. Clicking in the time display shows and hides the calendar OK. The main UI in my case is via VNC. The workaround was to ssh to the machine, vncserver -kill the vnc server, then kill the gnome-panel, restart vnc server How reproducible: Maybe more reproducible when system-config-display is not installed. Since installing it on 2007-01-16, the issue has not returned, nor has the machine been rebooted. More info: I hadn't actually looked at the real display of the machine for months {it doesn't have a monitor plugged in}. I then got a hint from a log that it was having trouble starting an X session. I realized I didn't have the normal -drv-nv package installed for the nvidia chip in it. I then telinit 3, installed system-config-display and xorg-x11-drv-nv. I had thought that the machine was in runlevel 3, but it was trying to goto runlevel 5, and failing. The second hint might come from noting that about three different times, soon after clicking the web browser icon {perhaps at exactly that point}, would be when the gnome-panel menus/icons would stop working. When this happens, all the open apps continue to operate normally {eg gkrellm updating, gedit able to type and edit. {might be something to look out for f7 server spin!} So, should a machine without startable X {eg driver not installed}, continue to work normally through a vncserver session ? There isn't enough info in the original bug to decide if this matches the same circumstances.
There are many reports of this, which are all being closed now as dup of 213283, please add further comments in bug 213283. *** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of 213283 ***