> > and that exists in SUSE since many many years.
> >
> > type
> >
> > sax.sh -a in the command line and get your messed up configuration fixed.
>
> You didn't get the point. It is intended for Windows users, who don't
> want to type at all.
>
> It should "just work", and no SUSE doesn't have it. I have replaced my
> nVidia card with internal VIA KM400 video chip, and know what ?
> openSUSE's X crashed !


It may have existed, but... who knew?  I've been using SUSE since 6.0.
 I never knew it existed.  I may be documented somewhere, but your
average user won't see it or understand it.  If you say man sax2, I'll
say "go away!"  (the polite translation of what I would really be
saying)

New users are really baffled by it all when X dies and they are stuck
at the CLI.  I can deal with it, and I know how to recover it
(although I've NEVER heard of or used sax.sh -a), but some poor new
user is really lost.

So.. I would say this is definitely a critical request.  Stop thinking
like a programmer/power user and start thinking like an end user...
Elegant X crash recovery is desperately needed as Alexey pointed out.

C
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to