Admittedly, my solution was a bit lacking for a couple of reasons.
1. The new shortcut to bring up gnome-system-monitor -p was not present in System Settings->Keyboard->Shortcuts.
2. The old shortcut in Keyboard shortcuts to use Ctrl-Alt-Delete to Log out was still present.
This probably causes confusion for users and is kind of a bad design. So I'm going to fix this for at least Trusty.
I will make a new shortcut in Keyboard->Shortcuts that sets Ctrl-Alt-Del to open gnome-system-monitor -p. I will also set Log out to Disabled. This way, it is clear to the end user what is going on here and is also quite easy to set Ctrl-Alt-Delete back to Log out or something else entirely.
What I need to do is ask Design which heading they want the new shortcut to be under and what they want the wording to say.
Admittedly, my solution was a bit lacking for a couple of reasons.
1. The new shortcut to bring up gnome-system- monitor -p was not present in System Settings- >Keyboard- >Shortcuts.
2. The old shortcut in Keyboard shortcuts to use Ctrl-Alt-Delete to Log out was still present.
This probably causes confusion for users and is kind of a bad design. So I'm going to fix this for at least Trusty.
I will make a new shortcut in Keyboard->Shortcuts that sets Ctrl-Alt-Del to open gnome-system- monitor -p. I will also set Log out to Disabled. This way, it is clear to the end user what is going on here and is also quite easy to set Ctrl-Alt-Delete back to Log out or something else entirely.
What I need to do is ask Design which heading they want the new shortcut to be under and what they want the wording to say.