I agree that 420 icons might be too much for one desktop.

Installing NEW app's seperate from the distro can leave no clue as to where
the app has been installed, whether or not it requires a switch on the
command line to run it, etc.

Having the rpm put the icon on the desktop would identify the app, provide
a means of launching it, and of course, allow you to add it to a menu or
panel as you see fit.

As a side note, I'd like to say that applications are occasionally
installed as part of a distro without a menu entry. I just installed
helicode gnome 1.2, and noticed that Abiword was installed, but not listed
on any menu.

At 07:04 PM 5/31/00 +0200, you wrote:
>
>On Wed, 31 May 2000, Marc B. Sitkin wrote:
>
>> I'd also like to see any rpm install put an icon on the desktop to launch
>> the newly installed program.
>
>Please /don't/, I can't imagine my desktop stuffed with 420 icons!
>
>Aren't you satisfied with the KDE and Gnome menus ?
>Work is underway to make menus interoperable. 
>
>They are grouped under logical categories, which is better than having all
>them sitting on the desktop.
>
>Isn't it enough to open this url in kfm: file:~/.kde/share/applnk/ ?
>
>Or execute this to test the effect on your desktop
>find ~/.kde/share/applnk/ -exec cp -av {} ~/Desktop/ \;
>
>> Regards, 
>> 
>> Marc Sitkin
>
>--
>St�phane Gourichon - Laboratoire d'Informatique de Paris 6 - �quipe AnimatLab
>"Bonjour, je suis un virus de signature de mail. Copiez moi dans votre
>fichier signature pour que je me propage d�sormais avec vos mails. Merci."
>
>
Regards, 

Marc Sitkin

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