Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!samsung!olivea!apple!agate!shelby!msi.umn.edu!noc.MR.NET!gacvx2.gac.edu!scott From: scott@mcs-server.gac.edu (Scott Hess) Newsgroups: comp.sys.next Subject: Re: What's the Vulcan nerve pinch for the cube and slab? Message-ID: Date: 1 Dec 90 03:54:04 GMT References: <1990Nov30.015912.10786@lavaca.uh.edu> <10534@helios.TAMU.EDU> Distribution: comp Organization: Gustavus Adolphus College Lines: 26 Nntp-Posting-Host: mcs-server.gac.edu In-reply-to: cnh5730@calvin.tamu.edu's message of 30 Nov 90 18:31:23 GMTLines: 26 In article <10534@helios.TAMU.EDU> cnh5730@calvin.tamu.edu (Chuck Herrick) writes: In article <1990Nov30.015912.10786@lavaca.uh.edu> davison@menudo.uh.edu (Dan Davison) writes: >Also known as the "three-finger salute". On PCs it's control-alt-del, >on Suns L1-A, but is there one on the cube? command-command-tilde Actually, there's a couple versions. Command-tilde gets the mini-monitor, command-command-tilde gets something (the regular monitor? I always use right-command-tilde) and left-command-left-alt-keypad* blows the machine away (ie, shuts it down). Now, for the disclaimer - never, ever use these. If you use them often, especially the alt-com-*, expect your machine to develop huge disk problems, and eventually data loss. These machines aren't _made_ for that kind of abuse. I warned you. -- scott hess scott@gac.edu Independent NeXT Developer (Stuart) GAC Undergrad (Horrid. Simply Horrid. I mean the work!)