|
Bugzilla – Full Text Bug Listing |
| Summary: | No way for user to change his language (without changing system language) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Product: | [openSUSE] openSUSE 10.3 | Reporter: | Petr Baudis <pbaudis> |
| Component: | Usability | Assignee: | E-mail List <bnc-team-screening> |
| Status: | RESOLVED DUPLICATE | QA Contact: | E-mail List <qa-bugs> |
| Severity: | Minor | ||
| Priority: | P5 - None | ||
| Version: | Beta 3 | ||
| Target Milestone: | --- | ||
| Hardware: | Other | ||
| OS: | Other | ||
| Whiteboard: | |||
| Found By: | --- | Services Priority: | |
| Business Priority: | Blocker: | --- | |
| Marketing QA Status: | --- | IT Deployment: | --- |
|
Description
Petr Baudis
2007-09-09 00:31:58 UTC
What desktop/login manager are you using? GNOME/gdm IIRC for GNOME you can/have to choose your user language at the login manager. Good point, that didn't occur to me. Still, having possibility to explicitly set this when creating the user or in user settings would be nice, I suppose if it didn't occur to me it won't occur to a lot of people (esp. since you think of this as something you should be able to change through user settings, and IIRC windows have it that way too). (Note that the gdm functionality doesn't quite work either, as described in bug 309066.) I fully agree, see my report about that against 10.2: bug 219552 Thanks for the pointer, I think this is just a dupe then. *** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of bug 219552 *** |