Hi, It's all about picking default settings new users wish. Imagine a user who is coming from Windows to Fedora, but he has no clue how linux works. It would greatly help him if the linux behaved to some extent similar to Windows - meaning applications look (themes), window's buttons layout (in this case same), menu layout, keyboard shortcuts etc. The same for users coming from Mac OS and for users used to Gnome and switching to KDE and opposite way. The idea is that user selects what he wants his desktop resemble, and then the usage of the desktop would be more intuitive to him. What would we need for that? 1. Check out, how much we can set up GNOME/KDE to look and behave like other DEs/OSes 2. If some of the stuff which makes this easier is available, but not in fedora, get it into repository 3. Write a utility that can change the DE's settings to what we have found in 1. 4. Integrate the utility into anaconda or first boot. The utility should be pretty straightforward - you will have a bunch of radio buttons captioned Windows 9x, Windows XP, Windows Vista, Mac OS X (dunno version differences though, might need more radio buttons for that one), GNOME, KDE (for how it should look like) and a two check boxes with simple description of GNOME and KDE (in the description should be noted primarily differences between those to, to ease selection to one who has no idea what GNOME/KDE is; for what will be used as 'backend'). Just a though... Your opinions? Is it even desirable? Does it make sense? Martin
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