#include <hallo.h> * Ross Burton [Thu, Jul 26 2007, 12:49:34PM]: > > I was even not > > able to get rid of this nautilus thingy at all because killing it opens > > a new one. I just renamed it and killed it to get rid of. > > If you don't use nautilus, why not remove the package? If you want to > keep the package installed but never use it, why not remove it from the > session?
Ha Ha Ha. This is the same stupid fallacy which exists with our x-session-manager management in Xsession. Why is _always_ some x-session-manager provider started (and not x-window-manager) after you have ONLY installed installed a such monster? This situation happens very easy, one user of many asks you to install KDE and *boom* the login behaviour has changed for everybody. And there is no way to get rid of it without editing stuff. When I asked why the easy configurable option of usin a WM has to be disabled in this situation, I got an answer like: "because if something else handles startup it has to comply with X Session standard". No explanation of apples-oranges situation helped the maintainer to understand. Eduard. -- <frobnic> diese netzverbindung ist aber schon ne maechtig kewle sache: frueher haben wir ueber ne schnur zwischen denk balkonen kommuniziert, da hing ne kaffeedose mit steinen dran. <Getty> was? <Getty> wieviel kbyte gehen denn da drueber? <mrvn> Getty: 4 stones/minute <Getty> da schaf ich mehr stones <zieh> <frobnic> also ne flasche bier passt nicht, da kam es zu einem leitungszusammenbruch. <frobnic> wobei, eigentlich war das ja mehr ein verbindungsabsturz -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]