On Sat, Jan 22, 2011 at 14:32, Peter Robinson <pbrobinson(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Well you'd want to be able to exclude it as well and adding it as
an
artificial dep to something like gnome-session won't allow it to be
removed.
GNOME Shell is the shell of GNOME 3 and thus depending on the GNOME Shell
from the gnome-session from GNOME 3 is not artificial but rather a
requirement. The fallback mode is intended as a fallback for driver and VM
problems, not as first-class desktop environment. You will be allowed to
force it to use the fallback mode should the detection fail to understand
your hardware but that's not quite there yet. See here:
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/desktop-devel-list/2011-January/msg00008.html
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/desktop-devel-list/2011-January/msg00138.html
So, doing what you describe from the UI makes a lot more sense (and
explaining why) from a user perspective than, "If you drivers don't work do
this magic with the package manager." The former is helpful; the later is
pain.