On 07/14/2015 09:16 AM, Fritz Hudnut wrote:
On Mon, Jul 13, 2015 at 5:10 PM, Israel israeld...@gmail.com
mailto:israeld...@gmail.com wrote:
In other words the OGs from compton stay in their hood while the
OGs from XFCE stay in theirs... and things can get messed up if
you try to
On Mon, Jul 13, 2015 at 5:10 PM, Israel israeld...@gmail.com wrote:
In other words the OGs from compton stay in their hood while the OGs from
XFCE stay in theirs... and things can get messed up if you try to bring
compton to XFCE.
@Israel:
OK, I can be down wit dat . . . it seemed like you
On 07/14/2015 09:29 AM, Israel wrote:
compton (and xfwm) should stop when your session stops (logout/ or a
restart of lightdm)... you can always check what is running via a task
manager/system monitor
Israel Fritz:
When I sign-out, my screen is still in (or becomes that way after going
On Tue, 14 Jul 2015 10:31:18 -0600
Aere Greenway a...@dvorak-keyboards.com wrote:
Is lightdm terminated (and re-initialized) by logging off, or does it
Lightdm stays as a display manager unless you restart it. It also because of
lightdm that you can graphically switch users with to users
On 07/12/2015 05:45 PM, Fritz Hudnut wrote:
..
@Israel, et al:
Another technical question came to mind on this compton disown . .
. besides wondering if there is a sudo in front of any of these
commands. And that is, since I am running XFCE, which has its own
compositing manager, and
Hi Fritz!
you can run a command from a terminal and then add *disown* after the
command to disown it from the terminal. Then if you close the terminal
the program will still be running. If you don't disown the program from
that terminal it will close when the terminal closes.
feel free