On Monday 09 June 2008 02:24:12 Ric Moore wrote: > On Sun, 2008-06-08 at 08:15 +0100, Anne Wilson wrote: > > On Sunday 08 June 2008 05:09:44 Ric Moore wrote: > > > On Sat, 2008-06-07 at 14:09 +0100, Anne Wilson wrote: > > > > On Saturday 07 June 2008 08:29:12 Jim Dever wrote: > > > > > g wrote: > > > > > > Jim Dever wrote: > > > > > >> Tim wrote: > > > > > >>> On Fri, 2008-06-06 at 05:11 -0400, Jim Dever wrote: > > > > > >>>> I just tried it again to make sure. From an X session > > > > > >>>> CTRL+ALT+Fn works but from a text console Alt-Fn does nothing. > > > > > >>>> It's remains at the same tty I was at when I issued the > > > > > >>>> CTRL+ALT+Fn from X. Any > > > > > > > > > > > > you are saying 'from an x session', then 'from a text console' > > > > > > and 'same tty'. > > > > > > > > > > > > so, 'from an x session to a text console, aka, virtual console, > > > > > > staying in same tty, aka, same virtual console'. > > > > > > > > > > > > correct? > > > > > > > > > > Let me try and explain better. From X: Alt-CTRL-F1 takes me to a > > > > > virtual console (tty1). From X: Alt-CTRL-F2 takes me to a virtual > > > > > console (tty2). But once I'm at a text, virtual console Alt-F1 or > > > > > Alt-F2 or Alt-F3.... don't do anything. I remain at the terminal > > > > > where I came out of X. And I can't get back into X either. I'm > > > > > stumped. > > > > > > > > > > >>> I am back on Fedora 9, now, and both ALT+Fn and CTRL+ALT+Fn are > > > > > >>> working for me, so the problem is probably specific to your > > > > > >>> setup. > > > > > > > > > > > > for me with f8, saa. > > > > > > > > > > > >> It's definitely a straight plain vanilla installation. > > > > > > > > > > > > as in what type keyboard? 102 -> 110 key? special music / power, > > > > > > etc? din, pc, usb port? > > > > > > > > > > Machine is about a 7 year old Dell with a 110 key PC keyboard. > > > > > It's not USB or wireless or anything like that. > > > > > > > > FWIW my ~6-year-old Packard Bell laptop has the same problem. The > > > > only wayout I can find is to shut down. > > > > > > You can't ctrl-alt F7 to get back to X?? Ric > > > > Correct. Ctrl-alt plus some Fx do nothing. One, I think it's F5, > > changes the screen resolution. F7 does nothing. At this point the only > > way out is to shut down - it won't even reboot. If you have any apps > > open they crash on the way out. > > Wow, it must be in the way the key combination works out in the > resultant ASCII code. I wonder if you switched your keyboard setting to > US instead of "Hail the Queen" if that would set ctrl-alt-F7 to rights, > as well as your other keys?? It's a thought. When trouble shooting with > a shotgun, you gotta hit something! Ric > It's not really worth the bother, Ric. This laptop shouldn't be running a modern full-featured distro with kde. It's 700MHz and 256MB RAM. I use it when I'm due to do something drastic, like installing a new distro on my main laptop - which was scheduled for this weekend, and didn't get done. Once that's done I'm going to try one or two of the mini-distros on this one. Anne
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