On 09/26/2011 08:48 AM, John Aldrich wrote: > On Mon September 26 2011, Ian Malone wrote: >> On the basis that you need to laugh every so often. >> http://live.gnome.org/GnomeShell/AppletsTransition: >> >> Desktop design copouts >> >> Then there are applets that are about making it marginally faster to >> do things that should be obvious and fast to do without an applet to >> do them. If these are useful, we've misdesigned. >> >> Connect to a Server... >> Disk Mounter >> Lock Screen >> Log Out... >> Run Application... >> Search for Files... >> Shutdown.. >> > Seriously... Disk Mounter, log out, run application, lock screen, command- > line. Those are not "core" apps???? Sheesh! Actually, the point is that they *are* core functions, and should therefore not need an applet to be efficient and discoverable. Log out and lock screen are built in to the shell (account menu at top right, keyboard shortcuts). Disk mounts and Connect to Server are handled by Nautilus. Run application is also built in (Super/Activities to search applications, Alt+F2 for run prompt). Not sure what the plan is for Search, but I think it's integrated with Nautilus, will be integrated with Documents, I wouldn't be surprised if it's integrated with the shell at some point. That leaves Shutdown, which is a much-debated pain point. I do use the Alternative Status Menu extension gives me a normal Shut Down button[1], and there's Alt-clicking the Log Off button. - Michael 1. I don't actually use it for the shut down button, as the Alt+Log Off behavior is fine for me. I use it for Hibernate, since my laptop lacks a dedicated Hibernate key and I haven't been able to get the Sleep key to trigger Hibernate. -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines