Correct me if I'm wrong, ma it won't be a waste of time.
Gnome-Tweak-Tool is developed by Gnome for G-S, and Canonical could easily
develop a tweak tool for his Unity shell.
Moreover, at this moment including Gnome-Tweak-Tool is not a good solution,
just because the package has a lot of dependences
Here is the main issue with having two tools.
They all do more or less the same thing, and why should we duplicate our
efforts?
The efforts that would be spent doing two separate tools, one with *slightly*
less features could be better spent on something like making Unity ready for
the LTS,
2011/10/16 Christian Rupp
> But power users just head to the software center and install gnome tweak
> tool - nothing big
> Nice would be a simple tweak tool which provides things like font and -
> size or opacity
>
Absolutely agreed. The two most common support requests I get for 11.10 is
font
Completely agreed with you there. Asking for that certain
gnome-tweak-tool by default does not make sense. Ubuntu must develop its
own system customization tool and ship it by default.
Eylem
On 10/16/11 8:49 AM, Christian Rupp wrote:
Nice would be a simple tweak tool which provides things lik
But power users just head to the software center and install gnome tweak
tool - nothing big
Nice would be a simple tweak tool which provides things like font and -
size or opacity
Am 16.10.2011 13:41, schrieb James Gifford:
Ian,
I point you to the Ubuntu power users community. There is a need
Ian,
I point you to the Ubuntu power users community. There is a need for a advanced
configuration tool - but as a part of the "Putting safety into our work" thread
on there, I think someone mentioned that if such a "Ubuntu/Unity tweak tool"
was installed by default, it would need to have a war
Isn't it possible to modify unity menu in order to place icons of
Accessories, Internet, Multimedia, opening in dash environment?
Supernova
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I disagree. The current setup is fine. Most users will never need nor want
to modify any of the settings that gnome-tweak-tool provides. For the users
that do it'svery easy to learn where the settings are and how to get them.
Gnome-tweak-tool provides access to a lot of irrelevant settings. In
add
On 10/15/2011 03:09 PM, James Gifford wrote:
Hello Brandon,
This is something that has been discussed before - it'd be better to
create a "system tweak tool" that handles everything - think ccsm,
gnome-tweak-tool and ubuntu tweak all in one.
Cheers,
James Gifford
On Sat, Oct 15, 2011 at 2:
Hello Brandon,
This is something that has been discussed before - it'd be better to create
a "system tweak tool" that handles everything - think ccsm, gnome-tweak-tool
and ubuntu tweak all in one.
Cheers,
James Gifford
On Sat, Oct 15, 2011 at 2:36 PM, Brandon Watkins wrote:
> I've seen many r
I've seen many reactions to the new ubuntu 11.10 release, and one veyr
common critisism is missing settings (particularly font settings. The
excellent gnome-tweak-tool brings back almost all of the commonly missed
settings and a lot of new users don't seem to know about it. This is really
something
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