Your message dated Sat, 20 Sep 2008 12:29:39 +0200 with message-id <200809201229.40301.holger@layer-acht.org> and subject line upstream issue, not packaging related has caused the Debian Bug report #195481, regarding Centralized configuration for location settings? to be marked as done. This means that you claim that the problem has been dealt with. If this is not the case it is now your responsibility to reopen the Bug report if necessary, and/or fix the problem forthwith. (NB: If you are a system administrator and have no idea what this message is talking about, this may indicate a serious mail system misconfiguration somewhere. Please contact owner@bugs.debian.org immediately.) -- 195481: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=195481 Debian Bug Tracking System Contact owner@bugs.debian.org with problems
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- To: submit@bugs.debian.org
- Subject: fragmented location info: hassle for users especially mobile ones
- From: Barak Pearlmutter <barak@cs.may.ie>
- Date: Fri, 30 May 2003 15:35:05 -0600
- Message-id: <E19LrWj-0006LQ-00@snot.cs.unm.edu>
- Reply-to: barak@cs.may.ie
Package: general Severity: wishlist I'm not sure where to assign this, but ... there are too many packages in Debian that ask for your location or variants thereof, all in an uncoordinated fashion. To whit: time zone latitude/longitude (wmmoonclock, wmsun, various mapping programs) nearest ICAO station (wmweather) paper size a4 vs letter (papersize library, and a couple stragglers) language (locale, and a couple stragglers) country (something must request this I'll bet) altitude (again I bet something uses this) Right now, this stuff is easy to get inconsistent, and each one requires effort to figure out. Some of them are even tricky to change, or even to remember. It would be nice if these would *ALL* assume default values given just one, on both a global system-wide basis and over-ridable on a per-user and per-session basis. In other words, when I move my laptop I should be able to put in the new lat/long and, assuming everything else is set up to default, all these other things should be filled in with their most probably values. Eg the nearest ICAO station, the most popular language in the location I'm in, the size of paper they use there, etc. Similarly, if I fill in just a country and it is a small country, and I haven't filled in lat/long or anything else, everything should snap to reasonable values. If that's not enough to figure out eg the time zone, at least the timezone menu should start with a list of timezones in that country. If I fill in a lat/long outside that country, it should give me a warning. If I fill in a city it should take the lat/long in the center of that city. If some user fills in a different country & city, blam everything should "just work" for that user. I think this could be accomplished with appropriate debconf stuff and a "location-related-query" executable that looks at global info, per-user files in their home directory, and environment variables. Or maybe a library, for easier retrofitting into little programs. With some modular architecture so one can add new location-related values which can be derived from lat/long/alt, and which therefore if filled in can also be used to constrain this and therefore other derivable values.
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--- Begin Message ---
- To: 195481-done@bugs.debian.org
- Subject: upstream issue, not packaging related
- From: Holger Levsen <holger@layer-acht.org>
- Date: Sat, 20 Sep 2008 12:29:39 +0200
- Message-id: <200809201229.40301.holger@layer-acht.org>
Hi, I'm closing this bug because basically it's too broad (it belongs into many packages) and also because these are upstream issues, nothing Debian can or should really do about this. It's a nice idea, but IMO nothing more than that at the moment. And it's an idea which should be dealt with upstream. regards, HolgerAttachment: pgpMVHaH1CluV.pgp
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