When I open the screensaver windows in the kde, I find that it is blocked . I switch to the gnome, it is the same. Is it some rpm that I do not install it?
ganu MailList wrote on 08/23/2010 12:36 PM:
When I open the screensaver windows in the kde, I find that it is blocked . I switch to the gnome, it is the same. Is it some rpm that I do not install it?
Are you trying to run as root? That is not recommended, and IIRC the screensaver refuses to run as root.
Phil
Yeah, I only use the root account, how to resolve it?
2010/8/24 Phil Schaffner Philip.R.Schaffner@nasa.gov
ganu MailList wrote on 08/23/2010 12:36 PM:
When I open the screensaver windows in the kde, I find that it is
blocked .
I switch to the gnome, it is the same. Is it some rpm that I do not install it?
Are you trying to run as root? That is not recommended, and IIRC the screensaver refuses to run as root.
Phil _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Yeah, I only use the root account, how to resolve it?
never EVER log in as root, unless doing emergency system repair, like when you are in single user mode because the system won't boot.
create a user account, with a password, use that for all regular purposes, and sudo or su to gain root access for specific commands that require it.
OK. Thanks.
2010/8/24 John R Pierce pierce@hogranch.com
Yeah, I only use the root account, how to resolve it?
never EVER log in as root, unless doing emergency system repair, like when you are in single user mode because the system won't boot.
create a user account, with a password, use that for all regular purposes, and sudo or su to gain root access for specific commands that require it.
Now I create a admin in admin group, the screensaver program is still blocked when run.
2010/8/24 ganu MailList ganu4maillist@gmail.com
OK. Thanks.
2010/8/24 John R Pierce pierce@hogranch.com
Yeah, I only use the root account, how to resolve it?
never EVER log in as root, unless doing emergency system repair, like when you are in single user mode because the system won't boot.
create a user account, with a password, use that for all regular purposes, and sudo or su to gain root access for specific commands that require it.