On Fri, 2008-04-25 at 08:23 -0600, Christopher A. Williams wrote: > On Fri, 2008-04-25 at 15:47 +0200, Ralf Corsepius wrote: > > > > I find these buttons very useful. My machine double boots. Sometimes I > > > make a mistake and allow the machine to boot to the wrong OS. Using > > > these buttons I can correct the situation. Other times I boot my machine > > > and I realize before I login that I really wanted to shutdown the > > > machine. > > > > "your" machine => single-user environment. > > > > > But I confused by your question. How does this extra functionality hurt > > > you or anyone else? > > Do you expect arbitrary users to switch off an unattended ("free") > > machine in a lab's or an office's machine pool, a classical workstation > > scenario? > > Bottom line answer to this is emphatically YES ABSOLUTELY! If it's a > kiosk type machine. Workstation != kiosk. A workstation is being shared amongst several users, users who aren't necessarily logged into the console. > In fact, given today's energy costs, I actually > would hope that someone would be savvy enough to do this at the end of > the day. There is absolutely no risk in powering such a system down as > the next user would only need to power the thing back up. To shutdown a machine, the "instance/authority" shutting down a machine would have to know that nobody is wanting to use a machine. > My home computer has multiple user accounts This is a different scenario than what I am talking about. > If you truly have a multi-user environment - and multi-user means that > more than 1 person is logged onto the machine simultaneously - then you > have a different scenario, and in this case, the system essentially is a > server. Well, any workstation and any Linux system to some extend is a server :) > > Q: How to disable these buttons permanently? > > I'm not certain, however I would be hesitant to do this. Why? This is the classical workstation-pool scenario. A set of machines being up around the clock and not supposed to be switched off. Ralf -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list