On Mon, 2008-05-05 at 09:14 +0930, Tim wrote: > Timothy Murphy: > >> What exactly is the "notification area"? > > Matthew Saltzman: > > In GNOME, it's the area on the panel with the clock, user-switcher, > > power, printing active, software update, security icons (some always > > on, some pop on to notify you of changed states). > > Just for clarity's sake, the clock is next to it, not in it. You can > have one without the other. Just in case someone thinks that they've > got it, just because they can see a clock. Good point. Thanks for the correction. While we are at it, the user switcher is also a panel app, not a notification icon. Sorry about that... > > >> What does it look like? > > > It's got three small gray spots at its left end that you can grab to > > move or right-click to configure. > > The drag indicator might be different that three spots, mine certainly > is. Right-clicking on the spot and picking the about option will > identify parts of your task bar. Hmm. Clicking "about" when I do that says "Notification Area 2.20.3". Clicking in the panel area but not on a notification icon gives the same result. > > >> How do you get it back, if it is "accidentally removed"? > > > Right-click on a panel, add to panel -> notification area. > > This should have been easy enough for the OP to find out for themselves, > by experimentation or an internet search. I gave the exact name for the > gadget that might need adding to the panel. Yep, if he knows that right-clicking on the panel gets "Add to panel". -- Matthew Saltzman Clemson University Math Sciences mjs AT clemson DOT edu http://www.math.clemson.edu/~mjs -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list