On Fri, 2008-05-23 at 09:06 -0400, Matthias Clasen wrote: > The backend needs to be flexible enough to support more > enterprise-oriented frontends, sure. Perhaps that hasn't been stated > clearly enough. Wrt to storage, I think we are pretty much within the > standard LDAP user schema. Do you access LDAP directly or do you use libuser -- for s-c-users, libuser abstracted local user accounts from LDAP ones enough so that it could handle local as well as directory accounts without (any= much? haven't checked lately) distinction in the tool. > > > Clicking on the face image brings up a dialog for selecting the user image which offers a set of > > > predefined images, as well as an option to use a webcam (if available), a simple drawing tool > > > (such as MeMaker) or pick an image from the filesystem. Fine point: when showing the > > > predefined faces, we should indicate which ones are already 'taken'. This dialog has not been > > > mocked up yet. > > > When creating a new user, it initially gets a randomly picked image from the predefined > > > images (excluding those that are already used for a different user) > > > > I don't think that's a good idea, as there are too many ways to > > unintentionally insult people by picking the wrong one, even colors can > > have bad connotations in some cultures ("Your @*§$"!§%" tool picked {a > > monkey, something green, ...} for my account, now I'll {have your guts, > > not do any business with you again, ...}!"). > > Or maybe we just make the business customers use the other frontend... I think that point's valid enough for home users. Even if we ignore home/SMB use as a potential business market, we surely don't want to hurt users' feelings. I don't like having to jump through hoops to achieve that as much as anybody else, but I'd rather not pull a "Pajero"[1] if it can be avoided -- I recently read an article in the newspaper about clashes of cultures and it's amazing how things that are innocuous in one culture are offensive in another. [1]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_Pajero > > Which makes "Show list of users" in the login settings kind of dead in > > the water, unless that list of users is somehow limited, e.g. to people > > who were logged into the system in a certain timeframe (e.g. since 4 > > weeks before the last successful login), and/or people who have been > > created on that system, ... > > ...which is pretty much exactly what the user list in the greeter > already does. That's nice. On account of not using LDAP/NIS/Kerberos on any of my systems (which have a gdm login screen), I wasn't aware of that it makes such a distinction. The last thing in that context I heard about was fast-user-switch-applet excessively burning CPU cycles to enumerate all NIS users (multiplied by a number of these applets running concurrently on a VNC/NX terminal server ;-), so I wanted to cover that bit. Nils -- Nils Philippsen / Red Hat / nphilipp@xxxxxxxxxx "Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." -- B. Franklin, 1759 PGP fingerprint: C4A8 9474 5C4C ADE3 2B8F 656D 47D8 9B65 6951 3011 -- Fedora-desktop-list mailing list Fedora-desktop-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-desktop-list