When reading this I had a similar thought concerning Nautilus. Wouldn't it be nice for power-user to enable in option (perhaps using gconf-editor or whatever) so when right clicking a file we get options like "Launch as user..", "Edit as user..", "View as user..." or whatever. Or this option could be presented when the user doesn't have sufficient rights for a particular file. It could also be triggered on actions the user doesn't have sufficient privileges for, e.g. when copying files to some location on disk where only root has enough permissions. Naturally the user should be confronted with the dangers of doing so, but it would be nice to be able to continue the operation after the root password has been entered. Perhaps is sounds a bit controversial, but it is just an idea floating to the surface of my consciousness. What do you people think of it? -Aschwin su, 18-08-2002 kello 23:13, Daniel Borgmann kirjoitti: > Hello, > > are there any plans to improve user managment? > I think this is a big problem currently of GNOME. Unix user managment > works great on the console, but there doesn't seem to be a convenient > replacement for "su" on the desktop. This has a critical effect, as it > forces home users either to rely on the terminal for certain tasks > (don't tell me that a user never ever has to touch anything but his > $HOME) or run as root all the time (or relogin as root for every single > task). And as it is always suggested _not_ to use the root account in X, > this is a problem. > I asked someone to explain me how Apple solved it in OS X as I figured > they would face the same problem. He told me that users can be > "administrators" and the first user is an administrator by default. > However, administrators still can't hose the filesystem, so it's not the > "root" account. But they can do things on the GUI like installing > software or changing the root and other user's passwords. Whenever they > try to change systemfiles (in finder most probably), they are asked for > this root password. And of course they can do sudo on the console (or su > but this seems to be disabled by default). > Is there a chance that we see something like this in the near future in > GNOME? I see a lot of people complaining that one of the problems of > GNU/Linux on the desktop still is, that you can't do everything from the > GUI. This might not be important for total beginners or companies (as > they have administrators for this task), but for the typical desktop > poweruser it certainly is. > > > - Daniel > > _______________________________________________ > Usability mailing list > Usability gnome org > http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/usability -- Aschwin van der Woude Open Source Specialist Creanor Oy (www.creanor.com) Mob. +358 50 5676665 Tel. +358 9 8567 6400 "Good management with crappy products will beat crappy management with good products every time" -- Bob Young PGP Fingerprint: 55AB 3F70 6C6F C345 A3AC D7A1 F2FF C586 EB04 ABDE Public key ID: 1024D/EB04ABDE Keyserver download: http://wwwkeys.pgp.net:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xEB04ABDE
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