Preston Crawford <me at prestoncrawford.com> wrote: > Okay, now you're "flaunting" again. :-) Yep -- I was there! Before I was born! I was hacking right with Englehart! I was the pioneer at PARC. And I definitely invented Ethernet -- so Al Gore could go on to invent the Internet later on (an idea he stole from me ;-)! > Seriously, though, good info and thanks everyone for the > replies. Mainly what I hope to do is map a couple > frequently used key combinations like Alt-Tab, as I use > that a lot as a web developer. GNOME, KDE, etc... do a great job of that. > Otherwise, whatever other options I think up in the > future.... Speaking of which ... 2D input is like soooooo '70s! If you want to know about the future, read up on the Picker in Sun's Looking Glass. Looking Glass is the future of the Linux desktop. And no, I'm not talking about the eye candy demo that 99.99% of other people talk about. I'm talking the Looking Glass APIs -- they will replace X. All while still supporting legacy X11, GLX, etc..., which is largely all the eye candy demo did. E.g., imagine bringing a wind into focus by just looking at it. With traditional windowing frameworks, that would be layer upon layer of software. With the picker, designed for all sorts of new input approaches right in the API, it's _native_. -- Bryan J. Smith | Sent from Yahoo Mail mailto:b.j.smith at ieee.org | (please excuse any http://thebs413.blogspot.com/ | missing headers)