Originally posted by: Felecha
I would expect the GUI to control the settings that kbdrate does? It hasnt happened for a while now and I have rebooted a number of times. I wonder if it was a glitch that was cured by rebooting. I've only had FC4 for a couple of days and there have been other screwy things that were present for a while and then not.
FC4 seems way ahead of RedHat 9, my only other Linux experience. Lots of nicer features in GUI-land. I'm extremely interested to learn the Linux ways, but I'm aware that so much Windows user-level stuff is lots easier still. But Linux is gaining.
You have picked the right distro to learn Linux, Fedora Core 4 is easy to setup and maintain, and in Linux land fancy GUI are not a sin (any more at least lol) , you are running gnome most probably, so go to
gnome-look,
there you will find all types of themes and mods for you to make your FC4 installation more enjoyable, just remember when you downloads a theme, save it to a folder somewhere in your home directory (I would suggest you make a folder called GNOME and save the compressed files downloaded, of themes & other GUI mods stuff in there) to install a theme all you have to do is the following :
gnome-menu-->Desktop--->Preferences-->Theme
Now once you are at the Theme window, there is a button called "Install New Theme" click that and it will ask you for the location of the Theme file you have downloaded, once that is done, you will be informed that the Theme was installed right.
then go to your Theme detail button and according to what type of theme you have installed it ill be under the Controls tab, Window border tab or the icons tab, or if it's full theme you will see an option in all the tabs.
And the nice thing is that you can mix between one or more themes, so you can use the icons of one with the Window border of another theme and the controls of a third theme, whatever suits your taste.
Finally have FUN
😉.
EDIT : Also I forgot to mention, you will in the future need to install apps, the easiest way to do this in FC4 is by installing the GUI for yum :
1- go to terminal
2- become root
3-type yum install yumex
4-after the install is over now you can go to SystemTools and you will find something at the bottom that says "Yum Extender" there you go now you can use a Graphical Interface inorder to search and install apps .
And don't bother with RedHat's up2date service (that little icon that shows up on the taskbar) remove it and stick with yum, as it's superior for apps installation and updates when it comes to personal use.