Hi, I was not happy with the low brightness of the standard characters on my laptop. On normal screens it may be nice to have only bold characters as bright as they could be, and the others dimmed; but on laptops, it would be better to have all chars really white: It happens a lot that there is too much light around you to read dimmed text. I found a command named setterm:
mv /etc/issue /etc/issue.old (clear;echo; setterm -background blue -foreground white -bold on; echo " Debian GNU \s 1.3 \n \l ";setterm -background black; setterm -bold on -store;echo;) >/etc/issue If you run the above as root, you get a new /etc/issue, which looks nice, and sets the default to really white text. Because this file is printed out before every login process on the console, you don't have to bother which tty's are affected. There is also an issue.net file, which is printed when you log in over the net, so it changes the behaviour of local logins only. There is an /etc/issue file appended here as an example. I was just so glad about having found this trick that I wanted to share it. Thanks, -- Lukas Eppler (godot) http://www.fear.ch telnet://soil.fear.ch:3333 talk:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[H[J [37m[44m[1mDebian GNU \s 1.3 \n \l [40m[1m[8]