> Ok ...
> The reason why I didn't put it in my own ~/.xinitrc is that, somehow, it
> doesn't care about it. So the only way was to put it in the system file in
> /etc/X11/xinit. Maybe somebody could help me out? (how do you make
> .xinitrc 'active'??)

make sure your .xinitrc is executable - if it isn't, have a look at the
'chmod' command. Something like 

>> chmod 700 .xinitrc 

should do it.

----------------------------------------------------------------
"Code isn't impressed by college degrees or large salaries. Code 
 just sits there, happily doing exactly what you told it to do. 
 If that isn't what you thought you told it to do, that's your 
 problem."           -- Kent Beck, Extreme Programming Explained

Gian Paolo Lorenzetto 
Dept of Computer Science and Software Engineering  
The University of Western Australia  
Nedlands, W.A., 6907
                                        >- [EMAIL PROTECTED] -<
                                  http://www.cs.uwa.edu.au/~gian

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