Feature added by: cristian díaz (moldavio)
Feature #308607, revision 1
Title: change kickoff menu for most smouth menu
openFATE: Unconfirmed
Priority
Requester: Important
Requested by: cristian díaz (moldavio)
Description:
hange kickoff menu for most smouth menu
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openSUSE Feature:
https://features.opensuse.org/308607
Feature added by: Agustin Chavarria (dj_ubun_1)
Feature #308269, revision 1
Title: kde4 on netbook
openSUSE-11.3: Unconfirmed
Priority
Requester: Important
Requested by: Agustin Chavarria (dj_ubun_1)
Description:
it should create a version of opensuse with kde version netbook, to how ubuntu is doing. with plasma netbook
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openSUSE Feature:
https://features.opensuse.org/308269
Feature added by: Mircea Kitsune (MirceaKitsune)
Feature #309237, revision 1
Title: Bigger default panel
openSUSE-11.3: Unconfirmed
Priority
Requester: Desirable
Requested by: Mircea Kitsune (mirceakitsune)
Description:
This is a minor change introduced in 11.2 which I believe Opensuse might have been better without. I find the default panel in 11.2 / 11.3 milestone 3 (KDE 4) a bit too small. It's closer to the Windows Taskbar's size, but for Linux I think the previous size was better (I like the default one in 11.1 personally).
In my opinion, the current size is not only a bit uglier (the panel's too small compared to everything else) but also makes it harder to click on some buttons, like desktops which are vertically half the size of the pointer. Here are a few screenshots showing the default panel I'm addressing: http://www.linuxforu.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/04-KDE4-Desktop.png -- http://jjtcomputing.co.uk/images/opensuse11.2-desktop.png
I believe 35-40 would be a nice default size, the current default apparently being 30 (measured in units shown when clicking Panel Options and dragging the Height slider in 11.2). Of course everyone resizes it to their own like after installing Opensuse, so this hardly has any importance. Just a suggestion for what I believe would be a better default if anyone else agrees.
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openSUSE Feature:
https://features.opensuse.org/309237
Feature added by: Mircea Kitsune (MirceaKitsune)
Feature #314624, revision 1
Title: Re-implement the Section Management tab in YAST - Boot Loader for grub2
openSUSE Distribution: Unconfirmed
Priority
Requester: Desirable
Requested by: Mircea Kitsune (mirceakitsune)
Partner organization: openSUSE.org
Description:
Since grub2 became default for openSUSE, I upgraded to it from grub. Everything works well, but there's one inconvenience: The fields to modify and sort entries are gone from Yast -> System -> Boot Loader. It would be nice if this section could implement the same menu for grub2, so users with less experience don't need to hack configuration files to modify entries.
For grub, there was a "Section Management" tab and a "Boot Loader Installation" tab in the Boot Loader window. When grub2 is installed, the first tab is gone, and only the second one exists. Here is a screenshot (not mine) showing the tab that existed for grub and is gone in grub2: http://i45.tinypic.com/lfpyq.png
Business case (Partner benefit):
openSUSE.org: It would be nice if this section could implement the same menu for grub2, so users with less experience don't need to hack configuration files to modify entries.
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openSUSE Feature:
https://features.opensuse.org/314624
Feature added by: giuseppe rossi (hawake)
Feature #316956, revision 1
Title: Device Driver Manager for openSUSE
openSUSE Distribution: Unconfirmed
Priority
Requester: Desirable
Requested by: giuseppe rossi (hawake)
Partner organization: openSUSE.org
Description:
Hi, i think that it could be useful to allow users to switch between OpenSource/Proprietary drivers in use (if both are available obviously) using a simple GUI created ad-hoc for the desktop in use (KDE -> Qt , GNOME/Xfce/Lxde -> GTK). In this way, if there is any kind of problem with a driver a not-expert user can disable it or switch to another one. Therefore i suggest to develop a device driver manager for openSUSE that could be included in YaST, or as a desktop application accessible by a non-root user (like Apper for updates). In certain Debian (Mint, Ubuntu...) derivatives are using something like this: [0] http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?t=113559&f=47 [1] https://github.com/SolydXK/device-driver-manager Thanks for reading,
Bye hawake
Use Case:
For instance, think to the video card drivers. Recently nVidia, AMD and Intel are improving their drivers but not always are the best choice (especially AMD...).
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openSUSE Feature:
https://features.opensuse.org/316956