El lun, 12-01-2004 a las 17:36, Tonnet, Bryan escribiÃ: > > 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 > > I don't think that will work unfortunately. I tried variations on this, > and the files produced in ~/.g* have bits that are specific for the user > and seem to be in a different format [slightly] to the defaults. I know > this is the way K does it, and unless I'm remembering incorrectly, I'm > sure I did this successfully in the Gnome 1.X days. Yes the K guys have succeeeded in creating something that, by luck, chance, or hard work, is extremely easy, if not a bit hackish, to customize for corporations. > > Pity, it seems to be crying out for a front end tool to manage this > facility. I might have a go myself if I ever find a few spare > hours/days/weeks/months. I suspect though, that someone has it on their > agenda somewhere, it's too big a hole to go missing for long. > > Bryan Tonnet > bryan@xxxxxxxxxx > ********************************************************************** > This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain > privileged information or confidential information or both. If you > are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender. > ********************************************************************** > _______________________________________________ > gnome-list mailing list > gnome-list@xxxxxxxxx > http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-list -- Manuel Amador (Rudd-O) GPG key ID: 0xC1033CAD at keyserver.net
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