Daniel Pocock (2013-07-17): > I agree it is not fundamentally broken and for people who know > Debian/Linux it is not hard to change later, but I still feel it is > rigid and it would not be hard to let people alter the timezone after > choosing a country
It would not be hard to ask 1000 questions just to make sure we give each and every option one might possibly want to tweak. > To give another example, consider a British person setting up a PC in > their holiday home in France: "country where you live" does not help > them make the system work the way they want. Picking a different timezone in her clock settings in whatever environment would work. Like, say, click the date/time area in Gnome, choose “parameters” and select a different timezone. (Also, last I checked, d-i isn't here to accomodate every convoluted scenario you can come up with.) > Another option may be changing the text: "Normally this should be the > country where the computer is physically located or physically > accessed. This will not limit you to using the language or locale of > the country you choose and the installer will proceed in the current > language." I'm not sure that's an improvement. Mraw, KiBi. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-boot-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20130717092117.gb21...@mraw.org