I think a better approach would be to 1) create a test user 2) log in as the test user 3) customize the environment 4) see what changed on the /home/test/ directory, including configuration files 5) replace the /usr/share/ GNOME configuration files with the ones that changed that should give everyone sane defaults. El jue, 08-01-2004 a las 12:24, Havoc Pennington escribiÃ: > Hi, > > It really is not that hard, the problem is that nobody has published a > nice working example of the panel specifically. Everything but the panel > is trivial, the panel is more complex because it has config values that > refer to other config values (e.g. the list of panels pointing to the > config for each panel) and for other reasons. > > This mail may help: > http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gconf-list/2003-December/msg00007.html > > You don't _have_ to use gconftool, you could also simply generate or > copy the XML files. gconftool is probably a little bit easier. > > Havoc > > > _______________________________________________ > gnome-list mailing list > gnome-list@xxxxxxxxx > http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-list _______________________________________________ gnome-list mailing list gnome-list@xxxxxxxxx http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-list