On Sat, 2005-11-05 at 03:14 +0800, 张勇顺 wrote:
> hi
>
>
> How can I add my startup programs to gnome session
>
>
> i am add the /usr/share/gnome/default.session
No. These files are not meant to be edited by the user, as they will
get overwritten on upgrade.
Instead,
hi
How can I add my startup programs to gnome session
i am add the /usr/share/gnome/default.session
Default]
num_clients=7
0,id=default0
0,Priority=10
0,RestartCommand=gnome-wm --sm-client-id default0
1,id=default1
1,Priority=40
1,RestartCommand=gnome-panel --sm-client-id default1
2,id
On Tue, Jul 12, 2005 at 12:16:25AM -0600, Ð∂äđ vÎяũŞ wrote:
> hey, can anyone tell me what i would have to do to remove programs from the
> system bootup? there are 2 servers that i want to remove from the system
> bootup but keep on my computer and have full control over their startup and
> shu
On Tue, Jul 12, 2005 at 12:16:25AM -0600, Ð∂äđ vÎяũŞ wrote:
> hey, can anyone tell me what i would have to do to remove programs from the
> system bootup? there are 2 servers that i want to remove from the system
> bootup
> but keep on my computer and have full control over their startup and shutd
Mr Mike wrote:
>On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 00:16:25 -0600, wrote:
>
>
>
>>hey, can anyone tell me what i would have to do to remove programs from the
>>system bootup? there are 2 servers that i want to remove from the system
>>bootup but keep on my computer and have full control over their startup an
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 00:16:25 -0600, wrote:
> hey, can anyone tell me what i would have to do to remove programs from the
> system bootup? there are 2 servers that i want to remove from the system
> bootup but keep on my computer and have full control over their startup and
> shutdown, i would l
hey, can anyone tell me what i would have to do to remove programs from
the system bootup? there are 2 servers that i want to remove from the
system bootup but keep on my computer and have full control over their
startup and shutdown, i would like to add them to the menu with 2 links
for each, one
On Mon, May 03, 2004 at 10:14:34AM +0100, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> On Sun, May 02, 2004 at 11:58:32PM -0500, Jaime Herazo B. wrote:
>
> > Is there a standard debian place for stuff like this? like a
> > $HOME/.startup file or something like that? that isn't dependant on the
> > windowmanager? if
Hi Jaime
On Sun, May 02, 2004 at 11:58:32PM -0500, Jaime Herazo B. wrote:
> Hi. This is a kinda newbieish question. I'm fond of wmaker, but from
> time to time i get and try out other windowmanagers, mostly in my quest
> for The One True Flashy Desktop, something to show-off linux to other
> peop
On Sun, May 02, 2004 at 11:58:32PM -0500, Jaime Herazo B. wrote:
> Is there a standard debian place for stuff like this? like a
> $HOME/.startup file or something like that? that isn't dependant on the
> windowmanager? if not, what would be a good place to start looking for
> this?
.xsession shou
Jaime Herazo B. wrote:
Hi. This is a kinda newbieish question. I'm fond of wmaker, but from
time to time i get and try out other windowmanagers, mostly in my quest
for The One True Flashy Desktop, something to show-off linux to other
people so they all go "wow!" :)
The problem is that i want
Hi. This is a kinda newbieish question. I'm fond of wmaker, but from
time to time i get and try out other windowmanagers, mostly in my quest
for The One True Flashy Desktop, something to show-off linux to other
people so they all go "wow!" :)
The problem is that i want to keep starting some
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