On Tue, Jan 12, 2016 at 10:16:18PM +, Rainer Weikusat wrote:
[cut]
> >
> > Simple enough to change this into:
> >
> > user@devuan:~$ echo "xfce4-session" >> ~/.xinitrc
>
> [rw@doppelsaurus]~#cat .xinitrc
> xsetroot -solid grey36
> exec xterm
Ahahahahahahah :D
HND
KatolaZ
--
[ Enz
On Tue, 2016-01-12 at 08:48 -0300, Renaud OLGIATI wrote:
> On Tue, 12 Jan 2016 12:30:16 +0100
> Florian Zieboll wrote:
>
> > > user@devuan:~$ echo "xfce4-session" > ~/.xinitrc
> >
> > I already noticed this in your upgrade guide – and especially then it's not
> > unlikely to break things when
On Tue, 12 Jan 2016 04:52:27 -
"dev1fanboy" wrote:
> minimal xorg and xfce4 install guides are now available
Hallo Chillfan,
when you think that your documentation has become somewhat stable and is
not prone to bigger changes anymore, I'd like to offer to translate
some more of it to german
Just received "Linux Update". One of the articles is about the
release of kernel version 4.4.
Included in the new kernel is "A new kernel mode-setting (KMS)
driver from Broadcom".
I gave a look at Wikipedia about Kernel-based mode-setting. The
article in the French Wikipedia stat
Didier Kryn writes:
> Just received "Linux Update". One of the articles is about the
> release of kernel version 4.4.
>
> Included in the new kernel is "A new kernel mode-setting (KMS)
> driver from Broadcom".
>
> I gave a look at Wikipedia about Kernel-based mode-setting. The
> articl
Le 13/01/2016 18:44, Rainer Weikusat a écrit :
Didier Kryn writes:
Just received "Linux Update". One of the articles is about the
release of kernel version 4.4.
Included in the new kernel is "A new kernel mode-setting (KMS)
driver from Broadcom".
I gave a look at Wikipedia abou
Didier Kryn writes:
> Le 13/01/2016 18:44, Rainer Weikusat a écrit :
>> Didier Kryn writes:
>>> Just received "Linux Update". One of the articles is about the
>>> release of kernel version 4.4.
>>>
>>> Included in the new kernel is "A new kernel mode-setting (KMS)
>>> driver from Broadc
Hi,
Eh, root is dangerous... Users should never ever use root: there are
other safer alternatives to that, like many modern Operating Systems
,like for example, Windows, Android, OSX. They all think for
themselves, updating themselves automatically without users having to
know and understand what