On Thu, May 14, 2015 at 5:19 PM, Kevin Fenzi <kevin@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thu, 14 May 2015 10:13:54 -0500 > Michael Catanzaro <mcatanzaro@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On Thu, 2015-05-14 at 10:18 -0400, Matthew Miller wrote: >> > These, though, I think are more rare and if it weren't for the >> > other, I'd say just uncheck the box in these cases. But I can see >> > rebooting to >> > switch OS as compellingly annoying enough alone. >> >> The boot menu appears before the update starts, so you can switch to >> the other OS straight away if you make this mistake, but will have to >> sit for the update next time you attempt to boot Fedora. >> >> IMO updating should be the default, though. It's what we want to >> encourage you to do. Not updating is discouraged, so you should need >> to click once for the discouraged behavior. > > Additionally, for people who apply their updates online, this sometimes > results in gnome-software downloading and getting a backup set in the > background, they download and update again, they reboot and off-line > updates tries to apply but finds that things are already updated, and > you get an error on the next boot about things already updated. :) > > Of course on-line updaters are perhaps the exception here, and this can > be worked around by simply disabling off-line via the gesettings > setting, but thought I would point it out. Depends on how you apply them ... you could/should simply use "pkcon update" it will reuse the metadata and downloads done in the background but apply them straight away. -- desktop mailing list desktop@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop