On Tue, 2006-04-11 at 14:34 -0400, Michael H. Warfield wrote: > On Tue, 2006-04-11 at 13:14 -0400, Matthew Saltzman wrote: > > > I liked it MUCH better when the battery applet was just a battery > > > applet and didn't try to do things I really didn't want it doing. I'd > > > like to just KILL the gnome-power-manager, but I want the battery > > > applet. Sigh... > > > You can have the battery applet. The battery monitor in add-to-panel is > > the same old one. What I don't know is what happens when you delete the > > power-manager applet. > Perfect... I've already readded the battery monitor icon. Now I just > have to figure out how to get rid of gnome-power-manager. It's in the > notification applet and doesn't have a "delete". So, I guess that will > have to be done from the session configuration. Well... Seems to be yet another ABOFH situation where they make it damn near impossible to kill the damn thing or prevent it from running. You can't delete it from the startup programs in the session configuration and it comes back even if you mark it "disabled", so you end up having to kill it every time after logging in. Saving the session is no help. Sooo... I guess finally figured out the correct configuration tool for gnome-power-manager... yum erase gnome-power-manager Things are much more better now. :-) The system is running the way I want it to and the way I expect it to. Thanks for all the information and help! Mike -- Michael H. Warfield (AI4NB) | (770) 985-6132 | mhw@xxxxxxxxxxxx /\/\|=mhw=|\/\/ | (678) 463-0932 | http://www.wittsend.com/mhw/ NIC whois: MHW9 | An optimist believes we live in the best of all PGP Key: 0xDF1DD471 | possible worlds. A pessimist is sure of it!
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