Another panel movement patch (Re: Getting a usability patch into gnome-panel package?)

2008-02-11 Thread William Lachance
On Sun, 2008-02-10 at 17:11 -0400, William Lachance wrote: > > On Sun, 2008-02-10 at 22:09 +1300, Matthew Paul Thomas wrote: > > The panel could copy this behavior: Alt+dragging could move the > > panel, > > while normal dragging does nothing. That way people would be much > > less > > likely t

Re: I hope people are paying attention...

2008-02-11 Thread Nanley Chery
On Feb 11, 2008 11:44 AM, David Prieto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > This is necessary to manage Network Manager keys, though arguably it > > should be under Preferences. > > I think the right thing to do here would be to remove "seahorse > preferences" from system → preferences and THEN moving se

Re: Why isn't gconf-editor in the menus by default?

2008-02-11 Thread Corey Burger
On 2/11/08, Scott James Remnant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Mon, 2008-02-11 at 07:23 -0800, Corey Burger wrote: > > On Mon, Feb 11, 2008 at 4:19 AM, Jo-Erlend Schinstad > > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > gconf-editor is a really powerful application when you want to > > tail

sugestion

2008-02-11 Thread dsonc
It's possible to merge the funcionality of "network monitor" applet into "network manager" applet (including alterning of icon colors during network activity)? I'm having some problems with network here, since i got my PRO100 Management Adapter works after include in linux boot option "irqpoll"

Re: I hope people are paying attention...

2008-02-11 Thread David Prieto
> This is necessary to manage Network Manager keys, though arguably it > should be under Preferences. I think the right thing to do here would be to remove "seahorse preferences" from system → preferences and THEN moving seahorse from accessories to system → preferences. After all, preferences fo

Re: Why isn't gconf-editor in the menus by default?

2008-02-11 Thread Corey Burger
On Mon, Feb 11, 2008 at 4:19 AM, Jo-Erlend Schinstad < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello everyone. > > I have a question that's been bothering me for quite some time. > > gconf-editor is a really powerful application when you want to tailor > your system. Even though it has about a million configu

Re: I hope people are paying attention...

2008-02-11 Thread Scott James Remnant
On Mon, 2008-01-28 at 04:02 +, Nanley Chery wrote: > Wiki is up! Sorry for the delay, I was a tad busy. > > https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MenusRevisited2 > Seahorse: This is necessary to manage Network Manager keys, though arguably it should be under Preferences. Transmission: Menu item needs

Why isn't gconf-editor in the menus by default?

2008-02-11 Thread Jo-Erlend Schinstad
Hello everyone. I have a question that's been bothering me for quite some time. gconf-editor is a really powerful application when you want to tailor your system. Even though it has about a million configuration options, I think it's very user friendly, offering sensible key names, descriptions o

Re: Getting a usability patch into gnome-panel package?

2008-02-11 Thread (``-_-´´) -- Fernando
On Thursday 07 February 2008 18:18:34 Jan Claeys wrote: > Middle click + drag moves panel applets too (if they aren't locked). > -- > Jan Claeys Thanks for the tip, I didn't know about that. -- BUGabundo :o) (``-_-´´) http://Ubuntu.BUGabundo.net Linux user #443786GPG key 1024D/A1784E

Re: Standardized home directories (was: Use a general ~Downloads-folder for all applications.)

2008-02-11 Thread (``-_-´´) -- Fernando
On Wednesday 06 February 2008 10:49:17 Bogdan Butnaru wrote: > I'd like to see the mess in ~ organized by purpose. The structure I'm > thinking of would have a (small) set of directories. Each application > would create a file or a folder with its name in each folder it needs. +1 Please, open a wi