<html><head><style type='text/css'>p { margin: 0; }</style></head><body><div style='font-family: Times New Roman; font-size: 12pt; color: #000000'>"Andre Robatino" <robatino@fedoraproject.org><br><br>>>Antonio Olivares <olivares14031 <at> yahoo.com> writes:<br><br>>> Dear folks,<br>>><br>>> I took the plunge to Gnome 3 and although I am playing around, I wish to add<br>some of the old functionality like<br>>> there was before, i.e, add a starting up script, in the old way one would open<br>gnome session and add the<br>>> program/script to run at bootup, now the same cannot be applied. <br>>><br>>> I want to add GKrellM system monitor. ATM I use a terminal and type<br>>> $ gkrellm &<br>>> or run it from the applications(System ->> GKrellM), but I want to see if it<br>can run without me typing it in?<br><br>>But my impression from reading is that the developers decided that people should<br>be able to use suspend/hibernate to avoid ever having to log out. Of course this<br>fails to consider a few "corner cases" such as dual boot, kernel updates,<br>non-working suspend/hibernate, power outages without a UPS or that last longer<br>than the UPS's capacity, etc. If this impression is wrong, someone please<br>correct me - in the rare cases I've seen anyone else ask this question, they<br>never got an answer which suggests there currently isn't one.<br><br><br>It is available. At logout press <Alt> for additional selections.<br></div></body></html>