--- Jesse Keating <jkeating(a)redhat.com> wrote:
[...]
Mostly because it was easier to read when the CD was
inserted and the Volume
showed up on the desktop. Its an odd site effect
that gnome-volume-manager
mounts in /media using the volume name. However it
_does_ work, so...
If there is significant request/reasons to change it
back to a - or a _ I'll
consider it.
Thanks for listening. Please consider my request as
one :-).
For example, the 'eject' (right click command) on KDE
does nothing. Knowing it failed to eject the first
time, KDE's smart enough not to present that option
for subsequent attempts (or may be it thinks it was
ejected successfully; don't know).
Incidentally, the /usr/bin/eject command executed
manually (like eject /dev/cdrom or /dev/hdd etc.)
spits out this error message at umount:
umount: /media/FC-6\040i386\040Disc\0405: not found
eject: umount of `/media/FC-6\040i386\040Disc\0405'
failed
(Possibly umount is unhappy with blank space
characters. Or it's quite likely KDE's eject command
is built on /usr/bin/eject also, thus exhibiting
similar problems.)
I understand Gnome's the prefered Fedora DE, but it
failing for /usr/bin/eject is perhaps an indication
that blank space characters are evil :-).
The same goes for other simple commands also: mount,
df etc.
I think they all stem from the fact that in the
original unix design, space charcters were simply used
as field separators only. A clever idiom to construct
a simple formated ASCII data, eh?. Some of us got used
to these simple things, complicated 'newer' concepts
are indeed harder to understand :-).
Thanks
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