<snip> >> This is a new feature from the GNOME team (i.e. it's intended). They believe there are no use cases for logging out, if you have just a single user. > > It is a little more nuanced than that. > > We don't offer to log out if there is just a single user, and a single > session (ie desktop env). I there is just a single user, and you have > e.g. xfce installed, we currently show 'Switch session'. Unfortunately, > that doesn't work, so we'll replace it with 'Log out'. If you have > multiple users, we always show 'Log out'. > > The region panel, where you can switch your language (which only takes > effect after logout currently, unfortunately), will get an explicit > logout button. > > You can always end your session by running gnome-session-quit in a > terminal. > Couple comments: 1). Since I boot to a non-graphical level and then run startx, I use logout when I'm doing an update to anything X related so I can get back to a console, run the yum update, and then startx again without having to reboot (so there's a case for having a logout option). 2). Opening a terminal and running gnome-session-quit is completely non-intuitive and a ridiculous "option" to just having the logout button available. I'm a long time user of Linux (and Gnome, KDE, XFCE, etc.) and I would have been hard pressed to come up with this solution very quickly...anybody less experienced would never figure this out! Kevin -- test mailing list test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/test