I was recently looking for a new laptop to buy and the Sony Vaio Z caught my eye. Its specs are quite amazing, and great for power users, especially the 1080p screen in a 13.3 inch size. However, I had a bit of trouble going to the product website on my Linux desktop.
The first time I opened the link in Firefox, my system started paging after a few seconds, then froze completely. I couldn’t even kill GDM or log in from the Ctrl-Alt-F1 terminal. I thought that this must be a Firefox bug, so I reset the system and opened the page in Chrome.
Lo and behold, it crashed again. I had a chance to open up top before the system became completely unresponsive and saw that it was using almost 4GB of RAM, and growing. Killing the process disabled output to my monitors, so I had to ssh in and force a reboot.
This is a very mysterious problem, since the site doesn’t even use Flash, which I thought was mostly responsible for bugs and memory leaks like this. I wonder if the OS hackers that couldn’t break Chrome have been bested by the Sony website… I ended up having to open the page in my Windows XP VM.
For anyone trying to replicate the problem, I’m running 64-bit Gentoo and Firefox/Chrome are both compiled with emerge.
hi, this may be a bit late but how did you even manage to get gentoo wireless working on vaio z, when you were installing it with gentoo-minimal-cd?
You must have installed something wrong because I have the same Sony Vaio Z and Mozilla Firefox works perfectly!
I think it was when the Flash player had more security issues and instability, and something on the Sony site triggered them.