On Mon, 2005-11-07 at 13:21 -0400, Mike Hernandez wrote: > Keep in mind that this will not run gnome with enlightenment, it will > run enlightenment with a gnome panel. This is a good thing, imho, but > if you wanted to use gnome because of it's session management or > nautilus desktop, etc, then you wouldn't get that because it's not a > gnome-session.
That's what I figured. Now that I've tried it out and the novelty has worn off, my question is this: what's the benefit? I don't know if I just don't understand the point or if I don't know how to take advantage of such a setup, but right now this doesn't seem very useful. Actually, I have the entire gnome menu now in enlightenment, so that's nice. Is that it, though? Regards, Ranbir -- Kanwar Ranbir Sandhu Systems Aligned Inc. www.systemsaligned.com ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by the 'Do More With Dual!' webinar happening July 14 at 8am PDT/11am EDT. We invite you to explore the latest in dual core and dual graphics technology at this free one hour event hosted by HP, AMD, and NVIDIA. To register visit http://www.hp.com/go/dualwebinar _______________________________________________ enlightenment-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/enlightenment-users
