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
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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
>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
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
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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
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Dear Debianists:
While we're on the subject, does anyone have any suggestions as to
why ctl-alt-bs might not kill X?
I was running a 0.93R6 system, started X with xdm from a (non-root,
I think) command line, but could't get out as advertised. I tried
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