<snip> Regarding the so called wishlist queues, i think that is causing some slow evolution of fedora. The blocking of some basic and really needed features, like the gnome menu editing, is putting fedora some steps behind. If testing versions are always being released why not activate those features, those that are really needed. Everyone knows that they aren't expected to work at 100%. </snip> Ehh... "Everyone knows that they aren't expected to work at 100%" What? I would be seriously pissed if i had tried to edit my menu, and it completely screwed up on me, ending with ex. deleting all my menu items. I thought there stood somewhere "fedora is not supposed to become a dumping ground for old, unsupported software that don't work right"? Doing so would be completely wrong. Linux today has a big red "top quality" stamp - and we should be very carefull not to loose that stamp. Kyrre -- Fedora-desktop-list@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-desktop-list