On Tue, Oct 11, 2011 at 2:30 PM, Anton Aylward
todd rme said the following on 10/09/2011 10:09 AM:
Why would that be implict? The whole point of activities is you can shut one down when you are done with it and it remembers all of the applications and starts them up again when you start the activity. So when you are not using an activity, you just stop it. When you need it again you start it and all your applications are there waiting for you.
Having revisited this I'm perplexed.
I can see how to create activities and destroy them. Could you help me by explaining how I could load up an activity, say with a collection of word processing tools or a collection of software development tools, then shut it down to resurrect it later in the same state?
That might just prove the initiative for me, and I suspect a few others here. It would be as if I had a clean new login, but with the same identity :-)
Make sure the "Activity Manager" or "Activities" widget is somewhere. If you are using the "Activity Manager" widget, click the widget, then click the stop button to the right of the activity name. This is the one I use since it is faster. If you are using the "Activities" widget, click the stop button in the upper-right corner of the activity icon. You can also get this by clicking the cashew and then clicking "Activities". The "Activity Bar" widget does not have this capability, unfortunately. -Todd -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-kde+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-kde+owner@opensuse.org