On Thursday 05 June 2003 06:24 pm, Troy Davidson wrote:
> Dennis,
>
> That did the trick! Thank you very much.
>
>
> Troy Davidson
> Linux User #311107
>
> ++
> Follow the adventures of a
> real life computer and
> gaming nerd!
>
>www.clandaith.com
> +
On Thursday 05 June 2003 12:56 pm, Troy Davidson wrote:
> Sir Robin,
>
> I have the same question. I think that the answer is in autologin. If you
> autologin, you only get the logout/cancel window.
>
> But, if you do a normal login you will get the full logout window.
>
> The times that I have s
Oh, I don't disagree with it being silly. If this is the case, I would love
to see it changed in the next version.
Troy Davidson
Linux User #311107
++
Follow the adventures of a
real life computer and
gaming nerd!
www.clandaith.com
Troy Davidson wrote:
Sir Robin,
I have the same question. I think that the answer is in autologin. If you
autologin, you only get the logout/cancel window.
But, if you do a normal login you will get the full logout window.
The times that I have seen the full logout window with autologin is if I
Sir Robin,
I have the same question. I think that the answer is in autologin. If you
autologin, you only get the logout/cancel window.
But, if you do a normal login you will get the full logout window.
The times that I have seen the full logout window with autologin is if I
have switched users
Dennis Myers wrote:
Quoting Robin Turner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Does anyone know which file governs whether the logout window gives a
full set of options (reboot etc.) or just logout/cancel? On my office
machine the former always come up, but at home I usually get the latter,
but it occasionally sw
try ctrl-L, to clear the screen. if logout(ctrl-d) works
On Thu, 23 Sep 1999, Jeanette Russo wrote:
> I seem to be having a slight problem when I use the KDE desktop. When I
> logout of KDE I get no command line just a long string of letters like this
> f
> f
> fff
> f
> f
> f
> f
> f
> f
>