Clearly GNOME runs on a lot of servers (for example, Red Hat Linux machines) and taking away features like icons in buttons that are frequently used on such machines (I saw many times server room machines run GNOME as a management UI) may not be good for Redhat customers (and CentOS users. etc), possibly an important part of the GNOME audience (paying customers for companies supporting GNOME).
On Wed, Oct 9, 2013 at 3:27 PM, John Stowers <john.stowers.li...@gmail.com>wrote: > * one manages a number of computers for others and turns that settings on > because it helps when explaining to people how to use the software - "hey > frank, I know $APP has a lot of buttons, to stop the process click on the > one that looks like a stop sign". > > John > > > _______________________________________________ > gtk-devel-list mailing list > gtk-devel-list@gnome.org > https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-devel-list > > -- Andy Tai, a...@atai.org, Skype: licheng.tai Year 2013 民國102年 自動的精神力是信仰與覺悟 自動的行為力是勞動與技能
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