Bug 309029

Summary: No way for user to change his language (without changing system language)
Product: [openSUSE] openSUSE 10.3 Reporter: Petr Baudis <pbaudis>
Component: UsabilityAssignee: 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
I didn't find a GUI way for user to change his personal language independent of the system language (and for changing the system language the user needs root password, obviously). I assume that the dialog for changing locale is something so important that we surely have it and it's only well-hidden somewhere and needs to be better accessible - or is it?
Comment 1 Stephan Binner 2007-09-09 06:45:40 UTC
What desktop/login manager are you using?
Comment 2 Petr Baudis 2007-09-09 14:11:53 UTC
GNOME/gdm
Comment 3 Stephan Binner 2007-09-09 16:22:15 UTC
IIRC for GNOME you can/have to choose your user language at the login manager.
Comment 4 Petr Baudis 2007-09-09 16:37:38 UTC
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).
Comment 5 Petr Baudis 2007-09-09 17:01:19 UTC
(Note that the gdm functionality doesn't quite work either, as described in bug 309066.)
Comment 6 Stephan Binner 2007-09-09 17:41:00 UTC
I fully agree, see my report about that against 10.2: bug 219552
Comment 7 Petr Baudis 2007-09-09 18:28:15 UTC
Thanks for the pointer, I think this is just a dupe then.

*** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of bug 219552 ***