On Sat, 2011-10-22 at 19:27 -0500, Malcolm wrote:
On Sat, 22 Oct 2011 11:46:17 +0530 Atri <badshah400@aim.com> wrote:
Hi!
On Fri, 2011-10-21 at 14:47 +0100, Richard Brown wrote:
Hi All,
This means we are heading towards a 12.1 release with no easy way for our GNOME 3.2 users to shutdown or hibernate their machine.
There's no easy way to shutdown, but for me more importantly (on an old fashioned desktop :) ) from GNOME 3.2 there is *absolutely no GUI way to hibernate*, easy or difficult [1]! Adding the alt-status-menu extension at least gives me one, albeit not-so-easy, way by pressing Alt and clicking on Suspend.
I agree that we should install the extension by default on all computers. Users who would rather stick to the "thou shalt not hibernate" route chosen by upstream (and I think it would be a fair guess to say that there would only be a minority of them) could still individually disable the extension.
Any proper website based extension installation system (such as the eagerly awaited extensions.gnome.org) should be able to determine if you already have an extension installed system-wide and give you the option to disable it on your account.
Bye.
Hi Looking at the output from; gsettings list-keys org.gnome.settings-daemon.plugins.power
There is;
active button-hibernate
There are options to set the keys for hibernate? I use a logitech multimedia keyboard on my desktop and I can define the keys. This keyboard also has a hibernate button which works fine, just like my netbook.
Thanks Malcolm! That helped me bind one of my keyboard keys to hibernate. However it is obviously clear that this is not an easily discoverable solution to the hibernate problem. For most new (and even existing GNOME 2.32) users, who had easy access to hibernate earlier would be lead into thinking that there is no way to hibernate from the GNOME desktop now. I still don't see any strong reason for not having the alt-status-menu extension enabled by default. It should be easy to disable extensions either by the user himself or even by the extensions.gnome.org website when it is launched. Seriously, do we want to be hindered by something that neither will be ready by 12.1 release nor even has a definite roadmap yet [1]? Bye -- Atri [1] https://mail.gnome.org/archives/gnome-shell-list/2011-September/msg00078.htm... -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-gnome+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-gnome+owner@opensuse.org