ביום שני, 11 ביולי 2005, 12:06, כתבת: > This is exactly what I said (please read the entire article I liked to). > Hebrew support in invidual applications and widgets is already quite good. > But, the problem is integration in a *distribution*. An Israeli user would > like Hebrew to be enabled "out-of-the-box" (after perhaps choosing "Hebrew" > in one place) without any special configurations. He or she would also like > all visible strings, helps, and so on to be in Hebrew. They would like to > have a Jewish calendar added to the standard calendar, Hebrew > spell-checking in every application that supports spell-checking, and so > on. They want all this to happen without issuing dozens of strange > commands, "apt-get"ing various additional packages, and so on. They don't > want to have to seperately choose "Hebrew" in obscure menus in each > separate application. You get the picture.
Nadav, whats wrong with the approach of Mandrake/Mandriva? You choose the language at the install and you have hebrew all the way to your desktop (even booting messages are in hebrew). Also Debian (-> ubuntu) have this feature. If you have problems with those distributions, report to them. I am sure they will fix the problems. -- diego, kde-il translation team, http://www.kde.org/il Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments. See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html ================================================================To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]