Re: [opensuse] How to configure the text displayed in the StarWars screen saver?

2007-05-11 Thread peter nikolic
On Thursday 10 May 2007, Clayton wrote: You mean someone wasted their time writing text editors other than vi ? Thank the various gods for that!!! This quote about vi about sums it up: - I thought it was the stupidest, most perverse and irritating thing imaginable. I couldn't believe

Re: [opensuse] How to configure the text displayed in the StarWars screen saver?

2007-05-11 Thread M Harris
On Thursday 10 May 2007 13:35, peter nikolic wrote: There is one even more infuriating piece of editor ware   anyone remember   Edlin    ye gads ..   no that even makes vi look good I still remember the days when we had to use: copy con filename.txt ...

Re: [opensuse] How to configure the text displayed in the StarWars screen saver?

2007-05-11 Thread Aaron Kulkis
peter nikolic wrote: On Thursday 10 May 2007, Clayton wrote: You mean someone wasted their time writing text editors other than vi ? Thank the various gods for that!!! This quote about vi about sums it up: - I thought it was the stupidest, most perverse and irritating thing imaginable. I

Re: [opensuse] How to configure the text displayed in the StarWars screen saver?

2007-05-10 Thread M Harris
On Wednesday 09 May 2007 23:31, Ken Jennings wrote: I recall in a previous version of Suse I could control the text to display in the StarWars screen saver.  (I have a file with the intros to all six movies.)  Can't seem to figure out how to do it now. 1) Enter the Control Center

Re: [opensuse] How to configure the text displayed in the StarWars screen saver?

2007-05-10 Thread M Harris
On Thursday 10 May 2007 01:24, M Harris wrote: 1) Enter the Control Center suse--control center 2) Appearance Themes, Screen Saver, Banners Pictures, StarWars 3) click Setup 4) enter the file name in the Text Program field If you

Re: [opensuse] How to configure the text displayed in the StarWars screen saver?

2007-05-10 Thread peter nikolic
On Thursday 10 May 2007, M Harris wrote: if you're a real man you'll use vi , otherwise you'll use whatever whimpy editor you like... joe... emacs...;-P i just gotta bite at this one ...# # Dont you meanVirtually Impossible -- SuSE Linux 10.3-Alpha2. (Linux is like a

Re: [opensuse] How to configure the text displayed in the StarWars screen saver?

2007-05-10 Thread Ken Jennings
On Thursday 2007-05-10 02:24, M Harris wrote: On Wednesday 09 May 2007 23:31, Ken Jennings wrote: I recall in a previous version of Suse I could control the text to display in the StarWars screen saver.  (I have a file with the intros to all six movies.)  Can't seem to figure out how to do

Re: [opensuse] How to configure the text displayed in the StarWars screen saver?

2007-05-10 Thread Ken Jennings
On Thursday 2007-05-10 02:37, M Harris wrote: On Thursday 10 May 2007 01:24, M Harris wrote: 1) Enter the Control Center suse--control center 2) Appearance Themes, Screen Saver, Banners Pictures, StarWars 3) click Setup 4) enter the file name in the

Re: [opensuse] How to configure the text displayed in the StarWars screen saver?

2007-05-10 Thread Clayton
You mean someone wasted their time writing text editors other than vi ? Thank the various gods for that!!! This quote about vi about sums it up: - I thought it was the stupidest, most perverse and irritating thing imaginable. I couldn't believe that people sat down to write a text editor

Re: [opensuse] How to configure the text displayed in the StarWars screen saver?

2007-05-10 Thread G T Smith
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Clayton wrote: You mean someone wasted their time writing text editors other than vi ? Thank the various gods for that!!! This quote about vi about sums it up: - I thought it was the stupidest, most perverse and irritating thing

[opensuse] How to configure the text displayed in the StarWars screen saver?

2007-05-09 Thread Ken Jennings
I recall in a previous version of Suse I could control the text to display in the StarWars screen saver. (I have a file with the intros to all six movies.) Can't seem to figure out how to do it now. The screen saver config for KDE doesn't appear to have any visible means of specifying a file