Re: X-window keys

1996-06-16 Thread Stephen Early
On Fri, 14 Jun 1996, Max Hyre wrote: >Martin Alonso Soto Jacome's <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> answer got to > me first: > > > Well, that's exactly what xdm is intended for. xdm tries to keep an > > xserver running permanently, so that you can always login to the system > > using a nice graphical l

Re: X-window keys

1996-06-14 Thread Max Hyre
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Dear readers: Thanks for the info! Martin Alonso Soto Jacome's <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> answer got to me first: > Well, that's exactly what xdm is intended for. xdm tries to keep an > xserver running permanently, so that you can always login to the syste

Re: X-window keys

1996-06-14 Thread Luis Francisco Gonzalez
>Dear Debianites: > >Let me clarify my previous post... (I just thought to go back and > try it for accuracy---maybe next time I'll think to do so *before* > posting :-).) > > > why ctl-alt-bs might not kill X? > >Rather, ``why X comes right back after dying''? After ctl-alt-bs, > X

Re: X-window keys

1996-06-14 Thread Martin Alonso Soto Jacome
On Fri, 14 Jun 1996, Max Hyre wrote: >Rather, ``why X comes right back after dying''? After ctl-alt-bs, > X does indeed appear to die---everything goes black, I see the virtual > terminal from which I started xdm momentarily, then I'm back in X > again. Well, that's exactly what xdm is inten

Re: X-window keys

1996-06-14 Thread Max Hyre
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Dear Debianites: Let me clarify my previous post... (I just thought to go back and try it for accuracy---maybe next time I'll think to do so *before* posting :-).) > why ctl-alt-bs might not kill X? Rather, ``why X comes right back after dying''? Aft