chrome://messenger/locale/messengercompose/composeMsgs.properties:
On Mon, Feb 08, 2010 at 10:20:47PM +0000, Alan Mackenzie wrote
However, I'm now trying to get X up and running. "The X Server
Configuration HOWTO", section 3. "Configuring Xorg" says:
"Hal comes with many premade device rules, also called policies.
These policy files are available in /usr/....../policy. Just find a
few that suit your needs most closely and copy them to /etc/...."
"For example, to get a basic working keyboard/mouse combination, you
could copy the following files...
/usr/.........../10-input-policy.fdi
/usr/.........../10-x11-input.fdi"
. Am I the only person that finds this semantic gibberish? Is there
any explanation somewhere of what a "policy" aka "device rule" is? What
is the semantic significance of a "device rule"? What does it mean, to
"rule a device", or what sort of restrictions are being placed on this
device?
My solution to simplify Gentoo...
waltd...@d531 ~ $ cat /etc/portage/package.mask
sys-libs/pam
sys-apps/dbus
sys-apps/hal
You'll have to do a manual depclean (very carefully) and
revdep-rebuild, but it's worth the effort to purify your Gentoo system.
Simpler than that, just add -hal to xorg stuff in package.use and then
run emerge -uvDNa world. It will rebuild a couple things, maybe even
just xorg, then everything is back to the old way. This allows hal to
be their for other things where it does work but it disables it where it
doesn't work.
I'm not saying your way won't work but I think mine is easier.
Dale
:-) :-)