I have updated to 11.04 few days ago and was quite surprised to lose my
session. Even when I switched to "Ubuntu Classic" I would still lose my
session. So I googled and found this discussion.

To be frank I find developers' reasoning to be flawed and to a certain
extent disturbing. Session saving might not have worked for some
applications but it did work for many others and since it was present in
Ubuntu for few years (I think) many people were relying on it. Disabling
it seems like display of disregard towards users, but I can understand
that sometimes decisions like that have to be made. What I don't
understand is why was this removed even as an option? You know for
people who decide to enable it. You basically removed it as a choice
which seems totally unreasonable.

Proposition to use suspend/hibernate for session saving sounds like a
cruel joke, for two reasons. Firstly, those features themselves are
unreliable and slow. (Talk about broken features that have side
effects.) Secondly, Ubuntu doesn't support rebootless kernel update, so
suspend/hibernate hardly help in situations when you need to update your
kernel, but even if it did they you still need to shutdown your computer
once in a while.

I have switched to Xfce for now and session saving works there just
fine.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/771896

Title:
  No way to save current session

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