> It's not like you are forced to use it you know.
> sudo sed -i -e
> 's:^WANTED_GUI="auto":WANTED_GUI="qt":' /etc/sysconfig/yast2
> Voila, your problem is solved.

That makes as much sense as changing the YAST Tango icons to Crystal.
Possible to do, but why am I munging the default install to "fix" poor
decisions by the developers?

If we simply accept everything Novell/SUSE decides without raising our
voices, then we will continue waltzing down the path without anyone
raising their hands and saying "wait a sec".  We yelled loud and clear
about the mess that was 10.1... and things were fixed in 10.2 and
continue to be fixed in 10.3.  We could have simply disabled zen/zmd
(which we all pretty much had to do anyway) and let Novell continue
with the mess they created... but we didn't.

This is another mess.  It is the default.  Why should I have to tell
all the people I support with openSUSE to go do some sysconfig change
(either with YAST or from the CLI) after the install?  On my own
machine... fine, I could do that, but I am NOT interested nor have the
time to do it across multiple installs at multiple locations in
different countries.

Up to 10.2 I could tell them... do the default install.  Make no
changes... and I knew that regardless of if they chose KDE or Gnome,
the toolset was the same when I needed to walk then through installing
more software.  Now it's not.  Now I and everyone else that supports
openSUSE in a multi-WM environment is faced with 2 different
toolsets... when we had a common one.

C.
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