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Re: Another program for burning dvds



On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 06:05:22PM +0000, Jean-Luc Coulon (f5ibh) wrote:
> Le 14.03.2005 18:51:49, Lennart Sorensen a ?crit?:
> >On Mon, Mar 14, 2005 at 05:09:45PM +0000, Jean-Luc Coulon (f5ibh)
> >wrote:
> >> Is there a GUI for growisofs apart from k3B?
> >
> >To me a gui for growisofs is about as necesary as a gui for ls. :)
> 
> This can be a troll ;-)
> 
> So say a gui to create/burn DVD which is not K3B

Well on the topic of things as useful as a gui to ls (such as nautilus)
there is this:

# apt-cache show nautilus-cd-burner
Package: nautilus-cd-burner
Priority: optional
Section: gnome
Installed-Size: 1476
Maintainer: Ross Burton <ross@debian.org>
Architecture: i386
Version: 2.8.5-2
Depends: dbus-1 (>= 0.22), libart-2.0-2 (>= 2.3.16), libatk1.0-0 (>= 1.7.2), libaudiofile0 (>= 0.2.3-4), libbonobo2-0 (>= 2.8.0), libbonoboui2-0 (>= 2.5.4), libc6 (>= 2.3.2.ds1-4), libeel2-2 (>= 2.8.2), libesd0 (>= 0.2.29-1) | libesd-alsa0 (>= 0.2.29-1), libgail-common (>= 1.6.6), libgail17 (>= 1.6.6), libgconf2-4 (>= 2.8.1), libgcrypt11, libglade2-0 (>= 1:2.3.6), libglib2.0-0 (>= 2.4.7), libgnome-keyring0 (>= 0.4.0), libgnome2-0 (>= 2.8.0), libgnomecanvas2-0 (>= 2.6.0), libgnomeui-0 (>= 2.8.0), libgnomevfs2-0 (>= 2.8.0), libgnutls11 (>= 1.0.16), libgpg-error0 (>= 1.0), libgtk2.0-0 (>= 2.4.4), libhal0 (>= 0.2.93), libice6 | xlibs (>> 4.1.0), libjpeg62, libnautilus-burn0 (>= 2.8.3), libnautilus2-2 (>= 2.7.1), liborbit2 (>= 1:2.10.0), libpango1.0-0 (>= 1.6.0), libpopt0 (>= 1.7), libsm6 | xlibs (>> 4.1.0), libtasn1-2 (>= 0.2.8), libx11-6 | xlibs (>> 4.1.0), libxml2 (>= 2.6.11), zlib1g (>= 1:1.2.1), mkisofs, cdrecord, nautilus
Recommends: dvd+rw-tools
Suggests: nautilus (>= 2.6.0), gnome-mime-data (>= 2.3.0)
Filename: pool/main/n/nautilus-cd-burner/nautilus-cd-burner_2.8.5-2_i386.deb
Size: 210870
MD5sum: 42130fe8db98832922afbf52cf9675e2
Description: CD Burning front-end for Nautilus
 Lets you burn CDs and DVDs easily with GNOME, by drag-and-dropping files in the
 GNOME file manager.

I have no idea how it works, as I don't use nautilus, k3b, or any other
thing requiring me to actually move the mouse to get work done, if I can
avoid it.  With the command line I know what is going on, and I can see
any errors that occour and fix them.  The purpose of a gui is to hide
details and problems from users so they think things are easier.

Len Sorensen



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