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In ratpoison it's just escape combo plus exclamation mark.
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I assume you can do the same in Linux? tie Windows key [I know it hurts me to use it too!!]
You can call it mod4 or super if that hurts less
Last edited by moljac024 (2008-10-16 21:13:31)
The day Microsoft makes a product that doesn't suck, is the day they make a vacuum cleaner.
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But if they tell you that I've lost my mind, maybe it's not gone just a little hard to find...
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Mr Green wrote:I assume you can do the same in Linux? tie Windows key [I know it hurts me to use it too!!]
You can call it mod4 or super if that hurts less
Using something that's branded Windows and calling it super hurts even more.
I like dmenu, but I find myself most of the time simply launching a terminal and then launch whatever from there.
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How do you bind programs to keys in gnome?
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well you can use keyboard shortcuts [ System --- Prefs] or you can go in to gconf-editor [apps--metacity] or use xbindkeys
Mr Green I like Landuke!
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Why I never had the idea to bind this useless windows key to something useful myself?
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I was reading about a Windows user who was using launchy for controlling his system then he started using Start menu just be hitting Windows key and typing what he needed to run
I assume you can do the same in Linux? tie Windows key [I know it hurts me to use it too!!]
The so-called "Windows" key has always been just another meta shift key, historically referred to as the super key. A handful of large companies proliferated keyboards with super keys bearing their company's logo. There is no reason not to use the super key however you wish, because like most things Microsoft didn't "invent" it or introduce its use in computing, either.
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"lxpanelctl run" with lxpanel
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I love dmenu. I use it for all my window managers, dwm or not!
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