On Friday 01 Aug 2003 7:52 pm, James Sparenberg wrote: > On Fri, 2003-08-01 at 01:09, Anne Wilson wrote: > > On Friday 01 Aug 2003 8:36 am, Bill Mullen wrote: > > > On Fri, 1 Aug 2003, Anne Wilson wrote: > > > > On Thursday 31 Jul 2003 11:46 pm, Bill Mullen wrote: > > > > > The only "ramification" of using su in an xterm to become > > > > > root is that any program you run from that shell thereafter > > > > > is run as root; the rest of your desktop is running as your > > > > > logged-in user, and is unaffected. > > > > > > > > The odd thing is that no-one ever bothered to say that after > > > > a root terminal session you could switch back to user > > > > immediately by typing 'exit'. It suddenly became so much > > > > more convenient. > > > > > > I use Ctrl-d, myself. The height of laziness. :) > > > > ??? I haven't met that one - and never miss a chance to be lazy > > > > Anne > > In a pinch alt-f4 works too.
Funny, that's one windows shortcut I never used <g> Anne
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