-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1
Brian Densmore wrote: | But wouldn't it be nice to be able to tell the installation program | to remove those offending lines, or replace them | with lines of resolution you want? I know how to do it by editing | the X files, and my system already boots that way. However my semi-literate | wife would totally lose it if she were to accidentally hit <ctrl><alt><+> | and all of a sudden her entire desktop vanishes and is replaced with | this new jigsaw puzzle piece of her old screen. This is the way she would | see it. She wouldn't recognize the her screen resolution just changed. | She would simply reply that that was a stupid thing to do and it just | confuses her, couldn't I just get rid of that? As it is she gets | frustrated enough, because I have been a lousy system administrator | and haven't set up her account by activating all those things she | might someday want to use. I love Linux, but there are still a lot | of little things that need tweaking to make it easier to maintain. <snip /> You can change the order with the xf86config or X -configure. There should be a nice control panel that allows you to change it without having to edit the config or use one of the config programs.
Chris - -- I digitally sign my emails. If you see an attachment with .asc, then that means your email client doesn't support PGP digital signatures. http://www.gnupg.org/(en)/documentation/faqs.html#q1.1