[gentoo-user] aterm into kterm?

2009-09-28 Thread Willie Wong
On my laptop the terminal emulator is currently aterm. (I know, I know, I really should switch to rxvt-unicode already. But I am about to get a new machine soon, so am too lazy to deal with it now.) But when I ssh into other computers, and issue echo $TERM it shows kterm. Now this has caused me a

Re: [gentoo-user] aterm into kterm?

2009-09-28 Thread Nils Larsson
Now, at work, the machines run some custom version of linux and I am not sure what the terminals are. And I also often use the VT and not use X on my laptop, so I am disinclined to set TERM in .bashrc. Well, bash is bash, it doesn't matter if you work machines use X or whatnot. Add: export

Re: [gentoo-user] aterm into kterm?

2009-09-28 Thread Mick
On Monday 28 September 2009, Willie Wong wrote: On my laptop the terminal emulator is currently aterm. (I know, I know, I really should switch to rxvt-unicode already. But I am about to get a new machine soon, so am too lazy to deal with it now.) But when I ssh into other computers, and issue

Re: [gentoo-user] aterm into kterm?

2009-09-28 Thread Willie Wong
On Mon, Sep 28, 2009 at 10:39:44PM +0200, Penguin Lover Nils Larsson squawked: Now, at work, the machines run some custom version of linux and I am not sure what the terminals are. And I also often use the VT and not use X on my laptop, so I am disinclined to set TERM in .bashrc. Well,

Re: [gentoo-user] aterm into kterm?

2009-09-28 Thread Willie Wong
On Mon, Sep 28, 2009 at 10:57:34PM +0100, Penguin Lover Mick squawked: I also have aterm and tried ssh with two different machines. Both return rxvt which is what echo $TERM gives when in a local terminal. Okay, this is progress. I didn't think to check this before. But apparently echo