Hi all, my 3 year old son just thought me a lesson. I'm running opensuse 11.0/KDE 3.5.10 as shared desktop at home, where each member of the family (except him :) ) has a login. Usually we open multiple sessions for each one of us, and we use "switch user" to open our sessions after the previous user have locked their's. We always lock our sessions, so the little one can not create problems. First, he discovered how to shut down the machine by clicking on "switch user / start new session", then when a new kdm session starts, he clicks system/shutdown. I changed this, so now a root password is required to shut down. With this problem solved I thought that we are safe. Not any more ... He found out another attack vector, which I can not find a way to prevent. He selects "switch user" and then new session. And from there, he changes the login type (System/console login). This asks that other user's KDE sessions will be killed, he selects OK, and ... all our sessions are killed, open applications/docs are closed ... and we have a "console login" :) Yes, he can not log in (yet), and we can re-login with alt-F7, but still not good. How should I remove this menu entry, or protect it somehow, so it does not kill all KDE sessions? Cheers -- Sunny Artificial Intelligence is no match for natural stupidity. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org