On Mon, 2010-08-09 at 20:43 -0400, Chris Tyler wrote:
> ather than use the menu, you can add a button somewhere else on the
> panel: right-click on the panel and select "Add to Panel", then select
> "Lock screen".
Have the icons for these applets changed since Fedora 9?
The lock icon is quite obv
On Mon, 2010-08-09 at 10:46 -0700, suvayu ali wrote:
> On 9 August 2010 09:25, Brian Wood wrote:
> > Yesterday I accidentally logged myself out rather than
> > locking the screen. I was kind of in a hurry and clicked
> > on the item below lock screen. That caused me
> > trouble and don't want t
On 9 August 2010 09:25, Brian Wood wrote:
> Yesterday I accidentally logged myself out rather than
> locking the screen. I was kind of in a hurry and clicked
> on the item below lock screen. That caused me
> trouble and don't want that to happen ever again. Is
> there a command I can run to lo
Also, I suggest slock. This is an very simple screenlock, without any
graphics UI, or feedback what you typing. I think this is perfect, if you
are want something simple but powerful.
Zoltan
2010/8/9 Chris Tyler
> On Mon, 2010-08-09 at 11:25 -0500, Brian Wood wrote:
> > Yesterday I accidentally
On Mon, 2010-08-09 at 11:25 -0500, Brian Wood wrote:
> Yesterday I accidentally logged myself out rather than
> locking the screen. I was kind of in a hurry and clicked
> on the item below lock screen. That caused me
> trouble and don't want that to happen ever again. Is
> there a command I can
Yesterday I accidentally logged myself out rather than
locking the screen. I was kind of in a hurry and clicked
on the item below lock screen. That caused me
trouble and don't want that to happen ever again. Is
there a command I can run to lock the screen? Tia.
--
Brian Wood
Ebenezer Enterpr