--- Alexey Rusakov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Matthew Paul Thomas wrote:
> > On Feb 17, 2006, at 4:21 AM, Alexey Rusakov wrote:
> >>
> >> Thomas Winwood wrote:
> >>>
> >>> GNOME has the image in the Linux community of
> being simplistic or 
> >>> featureless due to its preference not to add an
> option for 
> >>> everything under the sun. Why does GNOME not use
> an Advanced button 
> >>> to hide pickier settings keeping the regular
> user's experience the 
> >>> clean GNOME look which is desired?
> >>
> >> What for? I believe this button is unneeded for a
> an "ordinary user", 
> >> and "unordinary users" can use gconf-editor
> anyway.
> >> ...
> >
> > Oh, for goodness sake. Arguing whether an
> "Advanced..." button is bad 
> > is like arguing whether ozone is bad. It depends
> where it is
> In GNOME dialogs
> > and what it's doing.
> Shows "pickier settings", as described above.

I suggested a simple way of doing this a few weeks
ago: have the button (whatever it's labelled) open
GConf at the right node for the prefs it was clicked
in.

Though it sounds perverse, you could have a master
GConf setting "show GConf link in prefs dialogs"
that's off by default...


                
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