Auughh! That is tooo coool!

To replace the flying window on the start button.
In win 9x, open up user.exe with an icon editing program, and user32.dll (I think?)
in winNT. I can't stand seeing the flying window brainwash.

On Tue, 10 Dec 2002 22:33:55 -0700 (MST)
Trevor Lauder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> You can also run KDE/Gnome, etc on a windows machine too.  Same idea as
> with 2 linux boxes, just get a X Server for windows and a SSH client for
> windows that supports X Forwarding and you can have the Windows GUI and
> KDE up and running on the same monitor at the same time.  I did it once
> with the windows icons on the left and KDE icons on the right.  Windows
> task bar on the bottom and KDE on the top.  Was kind of cool looking. 
> Great for those times when someone absolutely needs windows for a specific
> app but they can still use a Linux application server at the same time for
> all the other apps :)
> 
> -- 
> Trevor Lauder
> Web: http://www.thelauders.net
> E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> > Hash: SHA1
> >
> > On Tuesday 10 December 2002 09:57, Richard Jenniss wrote:
> >> I still don't know how to do a remote X sessions, and I want to do a
> >> presentation on Display managers. (is Display Manager the proper
> >> context here?)
> >
> > Richie mentioned a couple ways to run apps on a local session, but
> > display  managers can help enable running the entire shebang (window
> > manager, apps...  everything above the X Server) remotely and they have
> > quite a few cool  features and are often one of the less obvious things
> > to set up...
> >
> > you can even run the display manage remotely, of course ;-)
> 
> 

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