> If you want to control what people do, you don't give them the root > password. But, the 'average' PC user is his own administrator, especially > for something like fedora which is way to high-maintenance for an > experienced administrator to choose to manage for everyone else, and he's > going to need to use the stuff whether it is hidden or not. The question is > whether you want to make it simple or make it confusing. You seem to want to > make it confusing just so everyone suffers as much as you did when learning > the arbitrary quirks of the distribution. > > Not so they suffer, so they learn. If the users are advanced they can modify their profile to suit them, i am concerned that a newbie, and more and more are jumping on board, just like me, will inadvertently screw himself because accessing more advanced commands was to easy and did not come with a warning that an advanced user doesn't need , because instead of forcing them to learn the quirks, it was decided to hell with him the inconvenience caused to the advanced user, who can work around it but doesn't want to because he or she is too lazy, is too great. Max -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list