Subject: Re: anyone knowledgeable enough pls help!
On Mon, 17 Jul 2000, Ron Rademaker wrote:
> On Mon, 17 Jul 2000, Pavel M. Penev wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > On Mon, 17 Jul 2000, Ron Rademaker wrote:
> >
> > > For the starting of x-windows, I guess you
On Mon, 17 Jul 2000, Joseph de los Santos wrote:
> Hi Pavel,
>
> Thank you. I would really appreciate it if you can send me your
> programs... if you don't mind that is :)
>
>
>
> Pavel M. Penev [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> This here is absolutely wrong. The X11 system uses its own signal
Hi Pavel,
Thank you. I would really appreciate it if you can send me your
programs... if you don't mind that is :)
Pavel M. Penev [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This here is absolutely wrong. The X11 system uses its own signals,
transported via TCP/IP. Clicking File->Quit is just like clicking any
On Mon, 17 Jul 2000, Ron Rademaker wrote:
> For the starting of x-windows, I guess you could but startx in .login in
> the users home-dir.
> The netscape part it quite a bit more difficult ( I guess you can start it
> using .Xsession or something, but you'll have to check the docs of that
> for
On Mon, Jul 17, 2000 at 01:23:05AM -0700, Joseph de los Santos wrote:
>
> btw, what's the difference between keycodes and keysyms?
The keycodes map between keys on the keyboard and numbers. The function
doesn't change if someone changes their key mapping with something like
xmodmap.
Keysyms,
On Mon, 17 Jul 2000, Joseph de los Santos wrote:
> I'm going out of my mind
>
> when a user logs in a terminal this is what will happen:
> -automatically starts x-window, all keybindings and or hotkeys will be
> disabled, run netscape and it can't be closed without asking for the user's
>
For the starting of x-windows, I guess you could but startx in .login in
the users home-dir.
The netscape part it quite a bit more difficult ( I guess you can start it
using .Xsession or something, but you'll have to check the docs of that
for more info), the closing part, here the idea I got on th
"Joseph de los Santos" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm going out of my mind
>
> when a user logs in a terminal this is what will happen:
> -automatically starts x-window, all keybindings and or hotkeys will be
> disabled, run netscape and it can't be closed without asking for the user's
>
I'm going out of my mind
when a user logs in a terminal this is what will happen:
-automatically starts x-window, all keybindings and or hotkeys will be
disabled, run netscape and it can't be closed without asking for the user's
password. Can a script be used for this? and anyone kind enough
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