On Fri, 2004-08-27 at 10:27, David Johnston wrote:
>
> Did you do this on the remote host, or before telnetting? Also, for
> , don't type "", just hit the backspace key (I'm sorry if I
> wasn't clear).
I attempted just about everything. Of course bash interprets the
backspace (and backspaces o
On Wed, 2004-08-25 at 09:24, David Johnston wrote:
> If that doesn't work, you can try remapping the console keyboard on
the
> terminals. For information on how to do that, look at "man loadkeys"
> and the files in /lib/kbd/keymaps. This is likely to be
time-consuming;
> you will have to use the
On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 16:43, David Johnston wrote:
> On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 07:23, Dirk H Bartley wrote:
> > Greetings
> >
> > I have users on LTSP terminals logging in to a server to get access to a
> > business application. In this application the backspace key does not
> > work from the client.
On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 07:23, Dirk H Bartley wrote:
> Greetings
>
> I have users on LTSP terminals logging in to a server to get access to a
> business application. In this application the backspace key does not
> work from the client.
I used to run into this on AIX machines a lot. There are two
Greetings
I have users on LTSP terminals logging in to a server to get access to a
business application. When using an X session with a gnome terminal, I
can set the compatibility to backspace key generates control-H to get
the backspace key to work. Lately I have them using LTSP terminals in
d