В Fri, 28 Nov 2014 02:19:29 +0100
"Carlos E. R."
Perhaps what you have to ask now is whether somebody knows how to configure *nautilus* to do "something" that results in installing an rpm when you click on it. The trick for getting good answers is to ask good questions. And not wait a month.
I briefly tested it (double clicking on RPM file) in 3.2/GNOME and it started installation and resolved and downloaded dependencies from remote repositories so it appears to do exactly what is requested already. Unfortunately, interface is very minimalistic - you do no get any real feedback what is happening, no progress bar, no information how many or which packages will be installed additionally and whether they are required or recommended. I suppose with large RPM file(s) and slow connection it may simply appear to hang.