Yea, verily, I say unto you that on this date (Mon, 29 Mar 2004 00:34:27
-0800) Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> didst appear within my Magick
Viewing Screen and, being somewhat pleasantly supplicatory, did
polemicize thusly:
> KDE will probably be the easiest transition for someone coming from a
Katipo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Paul Johnson wrote:
>
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>>
>> >Better yet, does anyone know what window manager Debian recommends
>> >and/or uses by default?? :? :? Thanks in advance.
>>
>>
>> KDE will probably be the easiest transition for someone coming from a
>
Paul Johnson wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>Better yet, does anyone know what window manager Debian recommends
>and/or uses by default?? :? :? Thanks in advance.
KDE will probably be the easiest transition for someone coming from a
Windows perspective.
IceWM has a Windows style menu structur
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> Better yet, does anyone know what window manager Debian recommends
> and/or uses by default?? :? :? Thanks in advance.
KDE will probably be the easiest transition for someone coming from a
Windows perspective.
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On Sunday 28 March 2004 06:56 pm, Adam Aube wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > When installing the OS, how do you know what window manager to
> > use??? I've bee told to install icewm, wms, twm, and I thing
> > something called "debconf."
>
> Debcon
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> When installing the OS, how do you know what window manager to use???
> I've bee told to install icewm, wms, twm, and I thing something
> called "debconf."
Debconf isn't a window manager - it's a configuration utility used by dpkg.
The answer to your question is "which
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