Bradley M Alexander wrote:
I helped a friend upgrade his laptop to X 4.0.3 from 3.3.6. He was using
xfs to serve fonts to X and KDE2 as a desktop environment. After the upgrade
(which didn't install xfs, btw), if he logs in (he uses kdm) as root, he has
his full selection of fonts, but if he si
Bradley M Alexander wrote:
>I helped a friend upgrade his laptop to X 4.0.3 from 3.3.6. He was using
>xfs to serve fonts to X and KDE2 as a desktop environment. After the upgrade
>(which didn't install xfs, btw), if he logs in (he uses kdm) as root, he has
>his full selection of fonts, but if he
BA> Anyone got any suggestions?
http://www.xfree86.org/current/fonts2.html#6
http://www.xfree86.org/current/fonts2.html#9
If it's anything else, drop me a note so I can update this document.
Juliusz
BA> Anyone got any suggestions?
http://www.xfree86.org/current/fonts2.html#6
http://www.xfree86.org/current/fonts2.html#9
If it's anything else, drop me a note so I can update this document.
Juliusz
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wi
I helped a friend upgrade his laptop to X 4.0.3 from 3.3.6. He was using
xfs to serve fonts to X and KDE2 as a desktop environment. After the upgrade
(which didn't install xfs, btw), if he logs in (he uses kdm) as root, he has
his full selection of fonts, but if he signs in on his user account, he
I helped a friend upgrade his laptop to X 4.0.3 from 3.3.6. He was using
xfs to serve fonts to X and KDE2 as a desktop environment. After the upgrade
(which didn't install xfs, btw), if he logs in (he uses kdm) as root, he has
his full selection of fonts, but if he signs in on his user account, h
6 matches
Mail list logo