Hi, I am surprised how some features are missing from CentOS 5. So far, I found missing:
1) GNOME Session does not prompt for saving on log out.
2) There isn't a "Run" option in the GNOME menus for running programs.
On 4/23/07, Ioannis Vranos ivranos@freemail.gr wrote:
Hi, I am surprised how some features are missing from CentOS 5. So far, I found missing:
GNOME Session does not prompt for saving on log out.
There isn't a "Run" option in the GNOME menus for running programs.
Both of these have been dropped from upstream, and seem to have been dropped by GNOME itself :/ as being easily gotten to options.
On Tue, 2007-04-24 at 00:02 +0300, Ioannis Vranos wrote:
- There isn't a "Run" option in the GNOME menus for running programs.
You can add it to a panel by right clicking the panel and selecting "Add to Panel". In the Add to Panel window, select "Run Application", and click the Add button.
Perhaps not as nice as having it integrated into the Gnome menu, but just as useful.
Regards,
Ranbir
Kanwar Ranbir Sandhu wrote:
On Tue, 2007-04-24 at 00:02 +0300, Ioannis Vranos wrote:
- There isn't a "Run" option in the GNOME menus for running programs.
When Gnome and KDE were new, I used to think I would prefer Gnome for the long term, but back then used KDE because it was more stable.
More recently, I've avoided Gnome because it's constantly being dumbed down, removing useful features.
You can add it to a panel by right clicking the panel and selecting "Add to Panel". In the Add to Panel window, select "Run Application", and click the Add button.
Perhaps not as nice as having it integrated into the Gnome menu, but just as useful.
For me, it's not an option I would willingly countenance, I personally install & use too many Linux computers to feel inclined to go messing around getting them all just right. I start with what's closest.
A "run application" option's been in Windows since 3.1 or so that I recall; in Windows XP, _I_ the administrator get to choose whether it's available to our users, it's not Gates the Vendor who chooses. That's a better way to do it.
John Summerfield spake the following on 4/23/2007 3:44 PM:
Kanwar Ranbir Sandhu wrote:
On Tue, 2007-04-24 at 00:02 +0300, Ioannis Vranos wrote:
- There isn't a "Run" option in the GNOME menus for running programs.
When Gnome and KDE were new, I used to think I would prefer Gnome for the long term, but back then used KDE because it was more stable.
More recently, I've avoided Gnome because it's constantly being dumbed down, removing useful features.
You can add it to a panel by right clicking the panel and selecting "Add to Panel". In the Add to Panel window, select "Run Application", and click the Add button.
Perhaps not as nice as having it integrated into the Gnome menu, but just as useful.
For me, it's not an option I would willingly countenance, I personally install & use too many Linux computers to feel inclined to go messing around getting them all just right. I start with what's closest.
A "run application" option's been in Windows since 3.1 or so that I recall; in Windows XP, _I_ the administrator get to choose whether it's available to our users, it's not Gates the Vendor who chooses. That's a better way to do it.
Maybe it is time to try KDE, or another window manager. It might suit you, it might not... But it is different.
Kanwar Ranbir Sandhu wrote:
On Tue, 2007-04-24 at 00:02 +0300, Ioannis Vranos wrote:
- There isn't a "Run" option in the GNOME menus for running programs.
You can add it to a panel by right clicking the panel and selecting "Add to Panel". In the Add to Panel window, select "Run Application", and click the Add button.
Or just press ALT-F2.
Ralph
Ioannis Vranos wrote:
Hi, I am surprised how some features are missing from CentOS 5. So far, I found missing:
- There isn't a "Run" option in the GNOME menus for running programs.
Hit Alt-F2. Or just open a terminal window instead of typing in a tiny little box.