Am Freitag, 16. August 2002, 11:10:53 Uhr MET, schrieb Adam Williamson: > GNOME, well, the GNOME team have taken a design decision that they > consider Nautilus so central to the functioning of their desktop > environment that it ought to be there. The line between essential core > components and stuff that's optional and can be replaced with something > else must be drawn somewhere; GNOME draw it behind Nautilus. Nautilus to > GNOME developers isn't exactly a file manager, it's a core component of > how GNOME deals with some things (file management, desktop). If you want > to use GNOME, you're probably lumbered with installing it.
Hi, this is a bad example, because on my desktop rox has replaced nautilus. I can work well with it, there are only few features missing from the default GNOME installation. So you do have a choice. -- G�tz Waschk <> master of computer science <> University of Rostock http://wwwtec.informatik.uni-rostock.de/~waschk/waschk.asc for PGP key --> Logout Fascism! <--
