Op zondag 28-10-2007 om 22:00 uur [tijdzone -0400], schreef Matthew Paul Thomas: > That probably wouldn't solve the problem. For example, almost everyone > who uses a laptop is the only user of their computer, so the > distinction between themself and "All Users" would be zero.
IME that's not really true inside family settings; laptops are often used by multiple users there. > A longer-term fix would be to use PolicyKit to make everything not > require a password unless/until you're actually making an > administrative change. Not only would this collapse the distinction > between Preferences and Administration, it would also allow more > merging of related items. (For example, gnome-about-me could be merged > with Users & Groups.) Such a solution would probably solve many issues. It should also be able to hide all "system" settings for users that have no rights to change them. -- Jan Claeys -- Ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing list Ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel-discuss