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Re: X and other visions
From: |
Harley D. Eades III |
Subject: |
Re: X and other visions |
Date: |
Sun, 13 Jun 2004 04:45:18 -0500 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.1006 (Gnus v5.10.6) Emacs/21.3 (gnu/linux) |
"Alfred M. Szmidt" <ams@kemisten.nu> writes:
> GNU/Hurd is quite an unfinished system,
>
> The only finished systems are the ones that are dead.
>
> I know about Xnest and I think it's a good idea, but it does not
> fix general design lacks in XFree86.
>
> Fixing XFree86 is kinda out of the scope of GNU/Hurd...
>
> If something like an error, that was not caused by user
> interaction, happens on a display you are not working at, you can
> be notified about it.
>
> Anything wrong with how it does it now?
>
> Either provides your UI a notification callback that opens e.g. a
> notification window, or is the display simply switched by the
> underlying tty driver.
>
> This is usally called a log-monitor.
>
> Things like these are typical tasks for a console user:
> - turn off the computer (on desktop machines)
>
> Also a typical task for a remote user; atleast w.r.t. to rebooting
> which is essentially the same with some minor details.
>
> - access the sound card and the mixer
>
> Ditto. I infact use the mixer and play songs remotely each and
> everyday.
>
> - start X sessions on the local machine
>
> X doesn't really differentiate between local and remove machines from
> what I know. So a remote X session is essentially the same as a local
> one.
>
> The current console user(s) should have almost root rights
> (regarding hardware access, so not installing software),
>
> Why give the user root access at all? Just make a new group and user,
> call them mixer for the mixer example. And then make the owner of
> /dev/mixer mixer, and the group mixer. Then just plunk in all users
> that want to change the volume into the group mixer.
>
> Or just allow everyone to read/write to /dev/mixer, which is obviously
> the right thing todo.
>
> on the other hand the network users should have less rights (it
> usually doesn't make sense when a remote user is permitted to turn
> the volume up and to play an annoying sound ...).
>
> Why not? I think it makes perfect sense. Say I have a "audio system",
> that plays songs. I connect to it remotely; shouldn't I be able to
> change the volume there? Should I be _forced_ to go to the console to
> change the volume?
I think being able to change the volume remote would be a nice feature.
>
> Saying what a user should be allowed to or not based on from where he
> or she is login in from is anti-social.
Agreed
> Cheerio.
>
>
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Harley D. Eades III
- Re: X and other visions, (continued)
Re: X and other visions, Alfred M. Szmidt, 2004/06/13
Re: X and other visions, Rian Hunter, 2004/06/13
Re: X and other visions, Sören Schulze, 2004/06/14
Re: X and other visions, Alfred M. Szmidt, 2004/06/14
Re: X and other visions,
Harley D. Eades III <=
Re: X and other visions, Bas Wijnen, 2004/06/13
Re: X and other visions, Marcus Brinkmann, 2004/06/15
Re: X and other visions, Thomas Bushnell, BSG, 2004/06/15
Re: X and other visions, Patrick Strasser, 2004/06/14
Re: X and other visions, Sören Schulze, 2004/06/13