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Yup, I've tried just about anything. Not sure if maybe it's the dual boot or something as I've got ubuntu on a different harddrive, so I just wiped the drive, going to install alongside Win 7 on my C drive and see if I get similar issues. Thanks.
sudo apt-get remove --purge bumblebee primus nvidia-prime
After this, reboot. This command should be used after the installation of the nvidia drivers. It doesn't work if you didn't install it yet.
The problem is probably this: the new nvidia drivers recommend the prime/bumblebee packages, which set up laptops with dual GPU (intel + nvidia). Unfortunatelly, they break evertything else.
You can also try downloading from NVIDIA's website. I usually have issues installing their drivers directly (such as the settings program not working). To use x-updates, try doing the following:
1. Open up Software & Updates (e.g. click on Dash Home, search for "updates", and click on "Software & Updates".
2. If there is a check mark next to xorg-edgers, click the box next to clear it. Enter your password if prompted.
3. Click on Add and enter this "deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/ubuntu-x-swat/x-updates/ubuntu saucy main"
4. Click Close.
5. You may need to update. You can either use the Update GUI or run this from the terminal: "sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade"
6. Reboot. Choose the "Recovery" option from grub. (Typically, you can get to this from the main menu in grub, by choosing the 2nd option in the list, e.g. "Advanced options for Ubuntu" and then selecting the 2nd option in the sub menu which should have "Recovery" in the name.)
7. At the Recovery prompt, select "Enable Networking". This will mount your drives as well as enable networking.
8. Select "Drop to a Root prompt". From there you'll want to uninstall any Nvidia drivers you currently have. Type "sudo apt-get remove --purge nvidia*".
9. After this, you should probably reboot, select recovery again, enable networking and drop to a root prompt again.
10. At the root prompt install the nvidia drivers. You can type this "sudo apt-get install nvidia-331". This should install nvidia-settings and nvidia-persistenced as well.
11. Run "nvidia-xconfig". This well setup you /etc/X11/xorg.conf file.
11. Reboot again. Try to log in to Ubuntu as usual. If you have any issues, you can check the xorg log file. Run this at a terminal: "cat /var/log/Xorg.0.log".
Something strange also to note here, when going into the recovery mode and going to "Resume" everything has loaded up fine and the drivers for some reason seemed to work partially (was testing with Metro: Last Light.) However when I'd boot into Ubuntu normally I'd get nothing but a black screen with no cli or ability to login, literally nothing but a black screen and my mouse cursor as a black X.
Bumblebee was not present, I can confirm that. Somehow having it dual booted from my C drive fixed it instead.
I can confirm that bumblebee is not present in the installed packages with ppa:xorg-edgers/ppa installing nvidia-current and nvidia-settings, as of 3/16/2014. It installs nvidia version 304 as the current and not 331.
I have further tested the nvidia driver after a resume from recovery and confirmed it fully functions in games known to crash this nouveau driver/GPU combination. I'm going to continue debugging to see if there is better fix than dual booting or resuming from recovery mode.
Tried installing Bumblebee - added new problems, made it even worse.
Tried editing /etc/default/grub to be "noquiet nosplash" - this made the black screen of the normal boot lose its cursor (even blacker) and the recovery resume to boot into low-graphics mode. I had to boot to a live USB to reinstall/repair grub.
I ended up with purge nvidia* and removing the ppa to just go back to the default nouveau. I also read on another forum that resuming from recovery causes it to bypass the GPU by rendering with the CPU. I can't verify this but that could explain why it doesn't crash on recovery resume - but that isn't a solution for performance reasons.
It usually seems to be a conflict issue with the Nouveau drivers installed by default in the latest debian versions.
As to why this is even an issue is beyond me. I gave up on it for now and decided to go with Arch linux and do everything from scratch. So far no issues whatsoever. May be a hardware issue, perhaps chipset issue, or maybe just an OS issue with the install path. I couldn't figure it out, was pretty much beyond me so I gave up with Ubuntu for now sadly.
When I study/learn more on Linux I'll come back to it and see if there's a resolution, for now I'll just stick with my Win7 and Arch dual boot. Best of luck to those having this same issue I had.