The tool is /usr/bin/gnome-language-selector and is not part of GNOME. It's part of Ubuntu, and might come from Debian. To find the name of a tool, you can run the program and then at the Terminal you can type "ps aux". Towards the last entries you should be able to find the name of the program you are looking for. You can search on "gnome-language-selector" on google for more. For author details, you can run dpkg -s language-selector Simos 2009/1/31 q10 <q101100111000@xxxxxxxxx>: > Hello: > > I'm not sure about this, but does GNOME have a small program that enables > the user to select the languages he/she wishes to be installed onto the > system? I know on the login screen, one can choose which already-installed > language to run session in, and that Ubuntu has such tool to enable one to > download and install the locales available for all the GNOME programs that > have them. Is that tool only in Ubuntu or is it in every GNOME? If so, how > can I access it (I'm using Debian Lenny and FreeBSD 7.1)? If there isn't, > can such a tool be made for a future release of GNOME, so that users can > easily choose to add/remove locales and set defaults? > > Thanks > Please reply > -q10 > > _______________________________________________ > 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