On Wed, Jul 10, 2019, at 19:04, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> Here is my next "low information" question, haha.
>
> I use i3lock which is like Xscreensaver but much much simpler; it plays
> no movies or games, just blanks the screen with a configured color or
> image. To unlock it you have to type your
On Wed, Jul 10, 2019 at 09:52:55PM +0100, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 10 Jul 2019 15:23:08 -0400, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
>
> > Which init are you using, what display manager, and how are you
> > launching it? I'm using systemd and sddm, and when I run `i3lock', I
> > cannot switch to different
On Wed, 10 Jul 2019 15:23:08 -0400, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
> > It bothers me that even when i3lock has locked the X session, I can
> > still switch to other Linux virtual consoles with Alt-Control-F ,
> > without typing the password. It so happens that on one of the other
> > virtual consoles th
On Wed, Jul 10, 2019 at 10:03:42AM -0700, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> Here is my next "low information" question, haha.
>
> I use i3lock which is like Xscreensaver but much much simpler; it plays
> no movies or games, just blanks the screen with a configured color or
> image. To unlock it you have to
On 7/10/19 7:03 PM, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
Here is my next "low information" question, haha.
I use i3lock which is like Xscreensaver but much much simpler; it plays
no movies or games, just blanks the screen with a configured color or
image. To unlock it you have to type your password.
It bother
Here is my next "low information" question, haha.
I use i3lock which is like Xscreensaver but much much simpler; it plays
no movies or games, just blanks the screen with a configured color or
image. To unlock it you have to type your password.
It bothers me that even when i3lock has locked the X
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