Rajko M. wrote:
On Sunday 12 October 2008 07:26:10 am Basil Chupin wrote:
Perhaps in several years time when it catches up with Windows' technology
It would be better that you catch with Linux technology. Remebering how works something that you don't want to use doesn't help you, nor new guys that are looking for information about openSUSE.
Don gave you one option.
Here is another: KDE 3: I just used Menu Editor to create subfolder Favorites and copy-paste (Ctrl-C Ctrl-V) few items in it. It is possible to create submenus and crowd there whatever one likes.
KDE4: The same should work with traditional menu widget, but KDE4 default menu has Favorites selection opened by default. You can put there whatever program from other manus you want. Find one program that you want in Favorites, right click on it and from context menu select Add to Favorites. Done.
Thanks for the response. But I am talking about a "default" ability of creating a folders into which you then place individual applications according to the purpose for which the folder was created. For example, in Windows XP I had folders - which I then placed in Quick Start - named "Utilities", "Games", "Multimedia", etc. Applications relevant to the name of the folder were placed in the appropriate folder. If I wanted a Utility - eg, a disk defragmenter, or a music file editor - I would bring up "Utilities" from the QuickStart bar and run the relevant applciation. The use of Favourites is not what I was referring to nor looking for. Ciao. -- If you go through life with your head in the sand, all people will see is an arse. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org