[New: openFATE 310178] gnome-schedule as standard in Gnome desktop
Feature added by: Philippe Duchenne (AmigaPhil) Feature #310178, revision 1 Title: gnome-schedule as standard in Gnome desktop Package Wishlist: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Neutral Requested by: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) Description: gnome-schedule is a front-end GUI for cron. It's easier to use for Mr Joe than setting a cron job from console. IMHO, it should be part of the standard openSUSE distribution of the Gnome desktop. Licence: GPL Requires: GTK+, Python Link: http://gnome-schedule.sourceforge.net/ -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310178
Feature changed by: Ned Ulbricht (ned_ulbricht) Feature #310178, revision 3 Title: gnome-schedule as standard in Gnome desktop Package Wishlist: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Neutral Requested by: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) Description: gnome-schedule is a front-end GUI for cron. It's easier to use for Mr Joe than setting a cron job from console. IMHO, it should be part of the standard openSUSE distribution of the Gnome desktop. Licence: GPL Requires: GTK+, Python Link: http://gnome-schedule.sourceforge.net/ + Discussion: + #1: Ned Ulbricht (ned_ulbricht) (2010-07-23 13:46:05) + Who is "Mr Joe"? + + Did you meet him personally--and he told you what would be easier for + him? Or are there some poll results, or usability-study results? + + Look, if it would be easier for you , then that's ok. Or if it would + make it easier for you to support your users. + + Generally, I think software should optimize for the common case . I'm + not sure that this "Mr Joe" you talk about is the typical openSUSE + user. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310178
Feature changed by: Philippe Duchenne (AmigaPhil) Feature #310178, revision 4 Title: gnome-schedule as standard in Gnome desktop Package Wishlist: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Neutral Requested by: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) Description: gnome-schedule is a front-end GUI for cron. It's easier to use for Mr Joe than setting a cron job from console. IMHO, it should be part of the standard openSUSE distribution of the Gnome desktop. Licence: GPL Requires: GTK+, Python Link: http://gnome-schedule.sourceforge.net/ Discussion: #1: Ned Ulbricht (ned_ulbricht) (2010-07-23 13:46:05) Who is "Mr Joe"? Did you meet him personally--and he told you what would be easier for him? Or are there some poll results, or usability-study results? Look, if it would be easier for you , then that's ok. Or if it would make it easier for you to support your users. Generally, I think software should optimize for the common case . I'm not sure that this "Mr Joe" you talk about is the typical openSUSE user. + #2: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) (2010-07-23 19:06:07) (reply to #1) + In French, I would have said "Mr tout-le-monde". Let's say the average + user. (I think you guess it, don"t you ?) + + I'm/was a "Mr Joe", and I was a puzzled newbie when I first tried to + set a cron job. Now I can use crontab, but I still find gnome-schedule + handy to create/review/modify cron jobs as it has a verbose, localized + GUI which allows you to select "Every day from Monday to Friday at 10: + 20 pm" instead of writing an entry like "20 10 * * 1-5 ..." with + (usually) vi. + + gnome-schedule is not a replacement, it's a tool. Don't use it if you + don't need it; having it installed by default will not prevent you to + use cron the way you like. I'm confident that most openSUSE users who + are looking for a "scheduler" will find it easy to use. + + (BTW, the equivalent for KDE is kcron.) + -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310178
Feature changed by: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) Feature #310178, revision 5 Title: gnome-schedule as standard in Gnome desktop Package Wishlist: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Neutral Requested by: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: gnome-schedule is a front-end GUI for cron. It's easier to use for Mr Joe than setting a cron job from console. IMHO, it should be part of the standard openSUSE distribution of the Gnome desktop. Licence: GPL Requires: GTK+, Python Link: http://gnome-schedule.sourceforge.net/ + Relations: + - Add Package gnome-schedule (feature/duplicate: 311347 ) Discussion: #1: Ned Ulbricht (ned_ulbricht) (2010-07-23 13:46:05) Who is "Mr Joe"? Did you meet him personally--and he told you what would be easier for him? Or are there some poll results, or usability-study results? Look, if it would be easier for you , then that's ok. Or if it would make it easier for you to support your users. Generally, I think software should optimize for the common case . I'm not sure that this "Mr Joe" you talk about is the typical openSUSE user. #2: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) (2010-07-23 19:06:07) (reply to #1) In French, I would have said "Mr tout-le-monde". Let's say the average user. (I think you guess it, don"t you ?) I'm/was a "Mr Joe", and I was a puzzled newbie when I first tried to set a cron job. Now I can use crontab, but I still find gnome-schedule handy to create/review/modify cron jobs as it has a verbose, localized GUI which allows you to select "Every day from Monday to Friday at 10: 20 pm" instead of writing an entry like "20 10 * * 1-5 ..." with (usually) vi. gnome-schedule is not a replacement, it's a tool. Don't use it if you don't need it; having it installed by default will not prevent you to use cron the way you like. I'm confident that most openSUSE users who are looking for a "scheduler" will find it easy to use. (BTW, the equivalent for KDE is kcron.) -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310178
Feature changed by: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) Feature #310178, revision 6 Title: gnome-schedule as standard in Gnome desktop Package Wishlist: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Neutral Requested by: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: gnome-schedule is a front-end GUI for cron. It's easier to use for Mr Joe than setting a cron job from console. IMHO, it should be part of the standard openSUSE distribution of the Gnome desktop. Licence: GPL Requires: GTK+, Python Link: http://gnome-schedule.sourceforge.net/ Relations: - Add Package gnome-schedule (feature/duplicate: 311347 ) Discussion: #1: Ned Ulbricht (ned_ulbricht) (2010-07-23 13:46:05) Who is "Mr Joe"? Did you meet him personally--and he told you what would be easier for him? Or are there some poll results, or usability-study results? Look, if it would be easier for you , then that's ok. Or if it would make it easier for you to support your users. Generally, I think software should optimize for the common case . I'm not sure that this "Mr Joe" you talk about is the typical openSUSE user. #2: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) (2010-07-23 19:06:07) (reply to #1) In French, I would have said "Mr tout-le-monde". Let's say the average user. (I think you guess it, don"t you ?) I'm/was a "Mr Joe", and I was a puzzled newbie when I first tried to set a cron job. Now I can use crontab, but I still find gnome-schedule handy to create/review/modify cron jobs as it has a verbose, localized GUI which allows you to select "Every day from Monday to Friday at 10: 20 pm" instead of writing an entry like "20 10 * * 1-5 ..." with (usually) vi. gnome-schedule is not a replacement, it's a tool. Don't use it if you don't need it; having it installed by default will not prevent you to use cron the way you like. I'm confident that most openSUSE users who are looking for a "scheduler" will find it easy to use. (BTW, the equivalent for KDE is kcron.) + #3: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-23 19:15:50) + (reply to #1) + Hi Ned, if you were the "typical" openSUSE user, most of the features + requiring run level 5 could safely be dropped. In fact, openSUSE as + well as other Distributions try to attract users from Windows, they are + surely needing some comfort, topping that of MS if they are going to + switch. Apart from that, please note: "Gnome-schedule is provided by + various Linux distributions, including Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, + Gentoo..." If you can't be helpful, at least have the decency to be + quiet. Have a lot of fun... + Casual -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310178
Feature changed by: Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar) Feature #310178, revision 9 Title: gnome-schedule as standard in Gnome desktop Package Wishlist: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Neutral Requested by: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: gnome-schedule is a front-end GUI for cron. It's easier to use for Mr Joe than setting a cron job from console. IMHO, it should be part of the standard openSUSE distribution of the Gnome desktop. Licence: GPL Requires: GTK+, Python Link: http://gnome-schedule.sourceforge.net/ Relations: - Add Package gnome-schedule (feature/duplicate: 311347 ) Discussion: #1: Ned Ulbricht (ned_ulbricht) (2010-07-23 13:46:05) Who is "Mr Joe"? Did you meet him personally--and he told you what would be easier for him? Or are there some poll results, or usability-study results? Look, if it would be easier for you , then that's ok. Or if it would make it easier for you to support your users. Generally, I think software should optimize for the common case . I'm not sure that this "Mr Joe" you talk about is the typical openSUSE user. #2: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) (2010-07-23 19:06:07) (reply to #1) In French, I would have said "Mr tout-le-monde". Let's say the average user. (I think you guess it, don"t you ?) I'm/was a "Mr Joe", and I was a puzzled newbie when I first tried to set a cron job. Now I can use crontab, but I still find gnome-schedule handy to create/review/modify cron jobs as it has a verbose, localized GUI which allows you to select "Every day from Monday to Friday at 10: 20 pm" instead of writing an entry like "20 10 * * 1-5 ..." with (usually) vi. gnome-schedule is not a replacement, it's a tool. Don't use it if you don't need it; having it installed by default will not prevent you to use cron the way you like. I'm confident that most openSUSE users who are looking for a "scheduler" will find it easy to use. (BTW, the equivalent for KDE is kcron.) #3: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-23 19:15:50) (reply to #1) Hi Ned, if you were the "typical" openSUSE user, most of the features requiring run level 5 could safely be dropped. In fact, openSUSE as well as other Distributions try to attract users from Windows, they are surely needing some comfort, topping that of MS if they are going to switch. Apart from that, please note: "Gnome-schedule is provided by various Linux distributions, including Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, Gentoo..." If you can't be helpful, at least have the decency to be quiet. Have a lot of fun... Casual + #4: Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar) (2011-02-24 16:02:26) + gnome-schedule has been packaged in home:dimstar:branches:GNOME:Apps + and requested for inclusion into GNOME:Apps. + Anybody willing to test can help increase the quality of the package + before it ends up in the real repositoris. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310178
Feature changed by: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) Feature #310178, revision 10 Title: gnome-schedule as standard in Gnome desktop Package Wishlist: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Neutral Requested by: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: gnome-schedule is a front-end GUI for cron. It's easier to use for Mr Joe than setting a cron job from console. IMHO, it should be part of the standard openSUSE distribution of the Gnome desktop. Licence: GPL Requires: GTK+, Python Link: http://gnome-schedule.sourceforge.net/ Relations: - Add Package gnome-schedule (feature/duplicate: 311347 ) Discussion: #1: Ned Ulbricht (ned_ulbricht) (2010-07-23 13:46:05) Who is "Mr Joe"? Did you meet him personally--and he told you what would be easier for him? Or are there some poll results, or usability-study results? Look, if it would be easier for you , then that's ok. Or if it would make it easier for you to support your users. Generally, I think software should optimize for the common case . I'm not sure that this "Mr Joe" you talk about is the typical openSUSE user. #2: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) (2010-07-23 19:06:07) (reply to #1) In French, I would have said "Mr tout-le-monde". Let's say the average user. (I think you guess it, don"t you ?) I'm/was a "Mr Joe", and I was a puzzled newbie when I first tried to set a cron job. Now I can use crontab, but I still find gnome-schedule handy to create/review/modify cron jobs as it has a verbose, localized GUI which allows you to select "Every day from Monday to Friday at 10: 20 pm" instead of writing an entry like "20 10 * * 1-5 ..." with (usually) vi. gnome-schedule is not a replacement, it's a tool. Don't use it if you don't need it; having it installed by default will not prevent you to use cron the way you like. I'm confident that most openSUSE users who are looking for a "scheduler" will find it easy to use. (BTW, the equivalent for KDE is kcron.) #3: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-23 19:15:50) (reply to #1) Hi Ned, if you were the "typical" openSUSE user, most of the features requiring run level 5 could safely be dropped. In fact, openSUSE as well as other Distributions try to attract users from Windows, they are surely needing some comfort, topping that of MS if they are going to switch. Apart from that, please note: "Gnome-schedule is provided by various Linux distributions, including Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, Gentoo..." If you can't be helpful, at least have the decency to be quiet. Have a lot of fun... Casual #4: Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar) (2011-02-24 16:02:26) gnome-schedule has been packaged in home:dimstar:branches:GNOME:Apps and requested for inclusion into GNOME:Apps. Anybody willing to test can help increase the quality of the package before it ends up in the real repositoris. + #5: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-28 12:18:52) + (reply to #4) + Dominique, you made my day ! Thank You ! For the sake of other dummies + like myself here is the full path to the rpm: http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/dimstar:/branches:/GNOME:/Ap... + If I didn't play around with the openSUSE build service, I would have had + a hard time finding it :-) -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310178
Feature changed by: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) Feature #310178, revision 11 Title: gnome-schedule as standard in Gnome desktop Package Wishlist: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Neutral Requested by: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: gnome-schedule is a front-end GUI for cron. It's easier to use for Mr Joe than setting a cron job from console. IMHO, it should be part of the standard openSUSE distribution of the Gnome desktop. Licence: GPL Requires: GTK+, Python Link: http://gnome-schedule.sourceforge.net/ Relations: - Add Package gnome-schedule (feature/duplicate: 311347 ) Discussion: #1: Ned Ulbricht (ned_ulbricht) (2010-07-23 13:46:05) Who is "Mr Joe"? Did you meet him personally--and he told you what would be easier for him? Or are there some poll results, or usability-study results? Look, if it would be easier for you , then that's ok. Or if it would make it easier for you to support your users. Generally, I think software should optimize for the common case . I'm not sure that this "Mr Joe" you talk about is the typical openSUSE user. #2: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) (2010-07-23 19:06:07) (reply to #1) In French, I would have said "Mr tout-le-monde". Let's say the average user. (I think you guess it, don"t you ?) I'm/was a "Mr Joe", and I was a puzzled newbie when I first tried to set a cron job. Now I can use crontab, but I still find gnome-schedule handy to create/review/modify cron jobs as it has a verbose, localized GUI which allows you to select "Every day from Monday to Friday at 10: 20 pm" instead of writing an entry like "20 10 * * 1-5 ..." with (usually) vi. gnome-schedule is not a replacement, it's a tool. Don't use it if you don't need it; having it installed by default will not prevent you to use cron the way you like. I'm confident that most openSUSE users who are looking for a "scheduler" will find it easy to use. (BTW, the equivalent for KDE is kcron.) #3: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-23 19:15:50) (reply to #1) Hi Ned, if you were the "typical" openSUSE user, most of the features requiring run level 5 could safely be dropped. In fact, openSUSE as well as other Distributions try to attract users from Windows, they are surely needing some comfort, topping that of MS if they are going to switch. Apart from that, please note: "Gnome-schedule is provided by various Linux distributions, including Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, Gentoo..." If you can't be helpful, at least have the decency to be quiet. Have a lot of fun... Casual #4: Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar) (2011-02-24 16:02:26) gnome-schedule has been packaged in home:dimstar:branches:GNOME:Apps and requested for inclusion into GNOME:Apps. Anybody willing to test can help increase the quality of the package before it ends up in the real repositoris. #5: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-28 12:18:52) (reply to #4) Dominique, you made my day ! Thank You ! For the sake of other dummies like myself here is the full path to the rpm: http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/dimstar:/branches:/GNOME:/Ap... If I didn't play around with the openSUSE build service, I would have had a hard time finding it :-) + #6: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-28 14:54:55) + (reply to #5) + Sorry, wrong link. correct one: http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/dimstar:/branches:/GNOME:/Ap... -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310178
Feature changed by: Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) Feature #310178, revision 13 Title: gnome-schedule as standard in Gnome desktop - Package Wishlist: Unconfirmed + Package Wishlist: New Priority Requester: Neutral + Info Provider: Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar) Requested by: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: gnome-schedule is a front-end GUI for cron. It's easier to use for Mr Joe than setting a cron job from console. IMHO, it should be part of the standard openSUSE distribution of the Gnome desktop. Licence: GPL Requires: GTK+, Python Link: http://gnome-schedule.sourceforge.net/ Relations: - Add Package gnome-schedule (feature/duplicate: 311347 ) Discussion: #1: Ned Ulbricht (ned_ulbricht) (2010-07-23 13:46:05) Who is "Mr Joe"? Did you meet him personally--and he told you what would be easier for him? Or are there some poll results, or usability-study results? Look, if it would be easier for you , then that's ok. Or if it would make it easier for you to support your users. Generally, I think software should optimize for the common case . I'm not sure that this "Mr Joe" you talk about is the typical openSUSE user. #2: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) (2010-07-23 19:06:07) (reply to #1) In French, I would have said "Mr tout-le-monde". Let's say the average user. (I think you guess it, don"t you ?) I'm/was a "Mr Joe", and I was a puzzled newbie when I first tried to set a cron job. Now I can use crontab, but I still find gnome-schedule handy to create/review/modify cron jobs as it has a verbose, localized GUI which allows you to select "Every day from Monday to Friday at 10: 20 pm" instead of writing an entry like "20 10 * * 1-5 ..." with (usually) vi. gnome-schedule is not a replacement, it's a tool. Don't use it if you don't need it; having it installed by default will not prevent you to use cron the way you like. I'm confident that most openSUSE users who are looking for a "scheduler" will find it easy to use. (BTW, the equivalent for KDE is kcron.) #3: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-23 19:15:50) (reply to #1) Hi Ned, if you were the "typical" openSUSE user, most of the features requiring run level 5 could safely be dropped. In fact, openSUSE as well as other Distributions try to attract users from Windows, they are surely needing some comfort, topping that of MS if they are going to switch. Apart from that, please note: "Gnome-schedule is provided by various Linux distributions, including Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, Gentoo..." If you can't be helpful, at least have the decency to be quiet. Have a lot of fun... Casual #4: Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar) (2011-02-24 16:02:26) gnome-schedule has been packaged in home:dimstar:branches:GNOME:Apps and requested for inclusion into GNOME:Apps. Anybody willing to test can help increase the quality of the package before it ends up in the real repositoris. #5: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-28 12:18:52) (reply to #4) Dominique, you made my day ! Thank You ! For the sake of other dummies like myself here is the full path to the rpm: http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/dimstar:/branches:/GNOME:/Ap... If I didn't play around with the openSUSE build service, I would have had a hard time finding it :-) #6: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-28 14:54:55) (reply to #5) Sorry, wrong link. correct one: http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/dimstar:/branches:/GNOME:/Ap... + #7: Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) (2011-08-30 20:25:36) (reply to #4) + Dominique, what is the status here? Could you update this request as + well as request 311347, please? -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310178
Feature changed by: Vincent Untz (vuntz) Feature #310178, revision 14 Title: gnome-schedule as standard in Gnome desktop - Package Wishlist: New + Package Wishlist: Done Priority Requester: Neutral Info Provider: Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar) Requested by: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: gnome-schedule is a front-end GUI for cron. It's easier to use for Mr Joe than setting a cron job from console. IMHO, it should be part of the standard openSUSE distribution of the Gnome desktop. Licence: GPL Requires: GTK+, Python Link: http://gnome-schedule.sourceforge.net/ Relations: - Add Package gnome-schedule (feature/duplicate: 311347 ) Discussion: #1: Ned Ulbricht (ned_ulbricht) (2010-07-23 13:46:05) Who is "Mr Joe"? Did you meet him personally--and he told you what would be easier for him? Or are there some poll results, or usability-study results? Look, if it would be easier for you , then that's ok. Or if it would make it easier for you to support your users. Generally, I think software should optimize for the common case . I'm not sure that this "Mr Joe" you talk about is the typical openSUSE user. #2: Philippe Duchenne (amigaphil) (2010-07-23 19:06:07) (reply to #1) In French, I would have said "Mr tout-le-monde". Let's say the average user. (I think you guess it, don"t you ?) I'm/was a "Mr Joe", and I was a puzzled newbie when I first tried to set a cron job. Now I can use crontab, but I still find gnome-schedule handy to create/review/modify cron jobs as it has a verbose, localized GUI which allows you to select "Every day from Monday to Friday at 10: 20 pm" instead of writing an entry like "20 10 * * 1-5 ..." with (usually) vi. gnome-schedule is not a replacement, it's a tool. Don't use it if you don't need it; having it installed by default will not prevent you to use cron the way you like. I'm confident that most openSUSE users who are looking for a "scheduler" will find it easy to use. (BTW, the equivalent for KDE is kcron.) #3: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-23 19:15:50) (reply to #1) Hi Ned, if you were the "typical" openSUSE user, most of the features requiring run level 5 could safely be dropped. In fact, openSUSE as well as other Distributions try to attract users from Windows, they are surely needing some comfort, topping that of MS if they are going to switch. Apart from that, please note: "Gnome-schedule is provided by various Linux distributions, including Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, Gentoo..." If you can't be helpful, at least have the decency to be quiet. Have a lot of fun... Casual #4: Dominique Leuenberger (dimstar) (2011-02-24 16:02:26) gnome-schedule has been packaged in home:dimstar:branches:GNOME:Apps and requested for inclusion into GNOME:Apps. Anybody willing to test can help increase the quality of the package before it ends up in the real repositoris. #5: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-28 12:18:52) (reply to #4) Dominique, you made my day ! Thank You ! For the sake of other dummies like myself here is the full path to the rpm: http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/dimstar:/branches:/GNOME:/Ap... If I didn't play around with the openSUSE build service, I would have had a hard time finding it :-) #6: Casual J. Programmer (casualprogrammer) (2011-02-28 14:54:55) (reply to #5) Sorry, wrong link. correct one: http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/dimstar:/branches:/GNOME:/Ap... #7: Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) (2011-08-30 20:25:36) (reply to #4) Dominique, what is the status here? Could you update this request as well as request 311347, please? + #8: Vincent Untz (vuntz) (2011-09-27 18:05:48) (reply to #7) + Submitted to Factory: 85161 -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310178
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