1 <chapter id="control-center">
2 <!-- Uncomment the <*info> below and add your name to be -->
3 <!-- credited for writing this section. -->
7 <authorgroup>Here you can set up different profiles for your Wireless card,
8 to be able to quickly switch settings if you connect to multiple
9 networks. You can select a profile to be loaded on KDE startup.
11 <firstname>Your First Name here</firstname>
12 <surname>Your Surname here </surname>
18 <title>The &kcontrolcenter;</title>
20 <indexterm><primary>&kcontrolcenter;</primary></indexterm>
21 <indexterm><primary>&kcontrol;</primary></indexterm>
22 <indexterm><primary>Configuration</primary></indexterm>
23 <indexterm><primary>Customization</primary></indexterm>
27 <imagedata fileref="kcontrol.png" format="PNG" />
29 <textobject><phrase>The &kcontrolcenter;</phrase></textobject>
30 <caption><para>The &kcontrolcenter;</para></caption>
33 <para>The &kcontrolcenter; is the place to go to change any settings that
34 affect the whole of your &kde; environment. You can open it using the
35 <guimenuitem>Control Center</guimenuitem> item in the &kmenu;, or with its
36 command-line name, <filename>kcontrol</filename>.</para>
38 <para>The settings are divided into several major categories, which each
39 contain several pages of settings. To display a settings page, expand the
40 major category by clicking on the <guilabel>+</guilabel> button next to it,
41 and then click on the name of the page you want. The settings page then
42 appears on the right, and you can change settings to your heart's
43 content. No changes take effect until you click on the
44 <guibutton>Apply</guibutton> button. If you decide, after making some
45 changes, that you want to leave the settings as they were, just click on
46 <guibutton>Reset</guibutton>.</para>
48 <para>If you need more help with a page, visit that page, then click on the
49 <guilabel>Help</guilabel> tab. You might also want to look at the
50 &kcontrolcenter; Handbook, which you can open with the
51 <menuchoice><guimenu>Help</guimenu><guimenuitem>&kcontrolcenter;
52 Handbook</guimenuitem></menuchoice>.</para>
55 <sect1 id="kcontrol-appearance-and-themes">
65 <title>Appearance & Themes</title>
67 <para>Here you will find settings that change the way your &kde; desktop and
68 applications look.</para>
72 <term><guilabel>Background</guilabel></term>
74 <para>This section controls the color or image that is set as your desktop
75 background. These settings can be applied to all virtual workspaces, or to
76 only a specific one. There are a range of background wallpapers that come
77 with &kde; or you can supply your own.</para>
82 <term><guilabel>Colors</guilabel></term>
84 <para>This is where you can modify the colors for your kde applications.
85 There are a variety of color schemes installed with &kde; by default, and
86 you can find others at kde-look.org. You can also create your own. Here you
87 can also modify the contrast and choose whether you want your &kde; colors
88 to be applied to non-kde applications, for a more consistant overall
94 <term><guilabel>Fonts</guilabel></term>
96 <para>Here you can control the various font settings for &kde; applications.
97 You can also modify here anti-aliasing settings, including what range of
98 fonts to exclude from anti-aliasing settings.</para>
103 <term><guilabel>Icons</guilabel></term>
105 <para>This section is where you can manage your icon themes and other
106 settings related to icons. New icon themes can be downloaded from
107 kde-look.org, and installed here. Conversely, you can remove icon themes by
108 highlighting them in the list and clicking remove. You can also set icon
109 sizes for various uses in &kde; and effects to apply to icons.</para>
114 <term><guilabel>Launch Feedback</guilabel></term>
116 <para>This is where you can modify what kind of cursor and/or taskbar
117 feedback you'd like for launching applications. You can also set the
118 duration of this feedback here. For example, the default setting is for a
119 bouncing cursor with a duration of 30 seconds, or when the application has
125 <term><guilabel>Screen Saver</guilabel></term>
127 <para>Here you can configure options about your screensaver. You can
128 configure the timeout before it starts, and whether it requires a password
129 to unlock the screen.</para>
134 <term><guilabel>Splash Screen</guilabel></term>
136 <para>This is where you can install, remove and test the splash screens that
137 display on &kde; startup. More splash screens can be downloaded from
139 url="http://www.kde-look.org">
141 http://www.kde-look.org</ulink>.</para>
146 <term><guilabel>Style</guilabel></term>
148 <para>This section allows you to modify your widget style. A variety of
149 styles come with &kde;, and more can be downloaded from <ulink url="http://www.kde-look.org">http://www.kde-look.org</ulink>. This is also
150 where you would enable or disable interface options such as transparent
151 menus, showing icons on buttons and tooltips. Some styles have more
152 configuration options than others.</para>
157 <term><guilabel>Theme Manager</guilabel></term>
159 <para>This is where you can create and manage themes that are made up of
160 personalized settings. They are a combination of desktop background, colors, &kde; widget styles, icons, fonts and what Screensaver you'd like to display . This allows you to save your favorite
161 <quote>looks</quote> and apply them with the click of a mouse button.</para>
166 <term><guilabel>Window Decorations</guilabel></term>
168 <para>Here you can configure your window decorations. You can modify the
169 style as well as place the buttons in custom positions. Some window
170 decorations will have more configuration options than others.</para>
175 <!-- Add links to "further reading" here -->
177 <title>Related Information</title> <listitem><para>If &kcontrolcenter;
178 doesn't have the setting you want, you may need to edit a configuration file
179 manually. See <xref linkend="hand-editing-config-files" /> for more
180 information about how to do this.</para>
183 <listitem><para>If you enjoy modifying the appearance of your &kde; desktop,
184 you can find plenty of themes and styles at <ulink url="http://kde-look.org">kde-look.org</ulink>.</para>
192 <sect1 id="kcontrol-desktop">
201 <title>Desktop</title>
203 <para>This is where you will find settings to configure the appearance and
204 behavior of your &kde; desktop.</para>
208 <term><guilabel>Behavior</guilabel></term>
210 <para>Here you can configure the behavior of your desktop. This is where
211 you would go to configure options such as showing or hiding desktop icons,
212 showing tooltips and icon layout. You can also specify if you would like to
213 see previews of particular filetypes on the desktop, and which devices you'd
214 like to see icons for.</para>
219 <term><guilabel>Multiple Desktops</guilabel></term>
221 <para>This is where you would configure the number of virtual desktops or
222 workspaces you would like to have, and what you would like them to be
223 called. By default &kde; has 4 virtual desktops, and you can configure up to
224 20. You can also enable switching between virtual desktops using the scroll
225 button on your mouse.</para>
230 <term><guilabel>Panels</guilabel></term>
232 <para>Here you can modify options to do with &kicker; and other &kde;
233 panels. Among the options are size, position, length and hiding. You can
234 also modify the appearance of the panel with transparency, background images
235 and icon zooming. This is also where you would configure various menu
236 options including what applications you'd like to show in your
242 <term><guilabel>Taskbar</guilabel></term>
244 <para>The Taskbar module allows you to configure options related to your
245 taskbar. You can configure whether to show windows from all desktops,
246 grouping of similar tasks and what actions you would like to assign to your
247 mouse buttons.</para>
252 <term><guilabel>Window Behavior</guilabel></term>
254 <para>This is where you would configure options related to the behavior of
255 &kde;'s window manager, &kwin;. &kwin; is extremely configurable and has
256 advanced features such as focus stealing prevention and different focus
257 policies such as focus follows mouse. You can also configure what actions
258 you would like to bind to certain keys and mouse events.</para>
263 <term><guilabel>Window-Specific Settings</guilabel></term>
265 <para>This is an advanced configuration dialog where you can set options for
266 the behavior of specific windows. There are many options here for the fine
267 tuning of your window layout, including what position on the screen you
268 would like certain windows to open to, and whether they should be shown on
269 the taskbar or pager. You can select windows by application, or even by
270 their specific role within an application.</para>
275 <!-- Add links to "further reading" here -->
277 <title>Related Information</title>
278 <listitem><para>to be written</para>
285 <sect1 id="kcontrol-internet-and-network">
294 <title>Internet & Network</title>
296 <para>This section is where you would configure settings to do with internet
297 and networking under &kde;.</para>
301 <term><guilabel>Connection Preferences</guilabel></term>
303 <para>Here you can set advanced networking options such as timeout values
304 for server connects. Usually you would leave these options at the defaults
305 unless you really knew what you were doing.</para>
310 <term><guilabel>Desktop Sharing</guilabel></term>
312 <para>Desktop Sharing allows you to invite someone to share your session
313 with you, or can enable you to log in remotely to your machine from another
314 location. You would then use a VNC client like &kde;'s Remote Desktop
315 Connection application to control your desktop over the network. This is
316 extremely useful if you want someone to help you perform a task. </para>
318 <para>Here you can create and manage invitations as well as set your
319 security policy for uninvited connections. You can also configure whether to
320 show a background image and which port for the service to 'listen'
326 <term><guilabel>File Sharing</guilabel></term>
328 <para>File sharing allows you to configure Samba (&Microsoft; &Windows;) and
329 <acronym>NFS</acronym> (&UNIX;) file sharing. To make changes in this module
330 you need to have the root or administrator password. This is where you would
331 set up whether users are allowed to share files without knowing the root
332 password, and which users are allowed to do so. You can also configure which
333 folders you're like to be shared, using which type of sharing and who is
334 allowed to view these shares.</para>
339 <term><guilabel>Local Network Browsing</guilabel></term>
341 <para>Here you can configure options related to browsing network shares in
342 &konqueror;. &konqueror; is able to browse a variety of network shares and
343 manipulate remote files as though they were on your local machine. You can
344 configure it to remember your preferred username and password for connecting
345 to &Windows; shares (Samba). You can also set what types of network shares
346 you would like to be able to browse, including &FTP;, <acronym>NFS</acronym>
347 and <acronym>SMB</acronym>.</para>
352 <term><guilabel>Local Network Chat</guilabel></term>
354 <para>This module allows you to configure options relating to the &UNIX;
355 <command>talk</command> daemon. It is a very simple network chat program
356 that runs in a terminal, designed for chatting over a local area
357 network. Some of its features are being able to set up an 'answering
358 machine' that will email to you messages left for you, and being able to
359 forward messages to another location.</para>
364 <term><guilabel>Proxy</guilabel></term>
366 <para>This is where you would configure &kde; to connect to a proxy server
367 rather than directly to the internet. Once again you would generally leave
368 these options at their defaults unless you really knew what you were
369 doing. If you do use a proxy server your network administrator will be able
370 to tell you what details to fill in here.</para>
375 <term><guilabel>Samba</guilabel></term>
377 <para>The Samba Configuration module requires the
378 <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> or administrator password. It is
379 an advanced configuration tool that allows you to control Samba's security,
380 shares, users and printers in an intuitive graphical interface. This is a
381 very powerful tool with support for configuring everything from simple file
382 and printer sharing, to using your Samba server as a &Windows; NT Domain
388 <term><guilabel>Service Discovery</guilabel></term>
390 <para>You can set up services browsing with ZeroConf. You can for example browse
391 your local network using multicast DNS.</para>
396 <term><guilabel>Web Browser</guilabel></term>
398 <para>This module is where you would configure options relating to
399 &konqueror; as a web browser. The usual options you would expect from a
400 web browser, such as cookie configuration, cache and history can be found
401 here as well as sections to modify keyboard shortcuts, plugins and
407 <term><guilabel>Wireless Network</guilabel></term>
409 <para>Here you can set up different profiles for your Wireless card, to be
410 able to quickly switch settings if you connect to multiple networks. You can
411 select a profile to be loaded on &kde; startup.</para>
417 <!-- Add links to "further reading" here -->
419 <title>Related Information</title>
420 <listitem><para>to be written</para>
427 <sect1 id="kcontrol-kde-components">
439 <title>&kde; Components</title>
441 <para>This section is where you can modify advanced &kde; options such as
442 file associations and default applications.</para>
446 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Component Chooser</guilabel></term>
448 <listitem><para>The component chooser allows you to select the default
449 applications you would like to use for various services. Here you can define
450 what Email Client, Embedded Text Editor, Instant Messenger, Terminal
451 Emulator, File Manager and Web Browser to use. If you prefer to use
452 <application>Xterm</application>, <application>Vim</application> or
453 <application>Mozilla</application>, this is the place to specify those
458 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>File Associations</guilabel></term>
460 <listitem><para>This is where you configure everything to do with file
461 associations. Here you can select a filetype, and choose what applications
462 you would like to be able to open it with. You can also select which icon
463 you would like to represent each filetype, and whether to show it in an
464 embedded or a separate viewer.</para>
468 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>File Manager</guilabel></term>
470 <listitem><para>Here you can configure the behavior of &konqueror; in file
471 manager mode. Among the options are fonts and font sizes, previews over
472 various network protocols and context menus. &konqueror; is an extremely
473 powerful and configurable file management tool with a plethora of
474 options. For more information, consult the &konqueror; handbook.</para>
478 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>KDE Performance</guilabel></term>
480 <listitem><para>Here are settings related to the memory usage of
481 &konqueror;. <guilabel>Minimize Memory Usage</guilabel> allows you to
482 control whether separate instances of &konqueror; will open or whether all
483 new &konqueror; windows connect to the same instance. This has the effect of
484 reducing memory usage. You can also select whether to pre-load &konqueror;
485 after &kde; startup, to reduce start times.</para>
489 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>KDE Resources Configuration</guilabel></term>
491 <listitem><para><remark>To be written</remark></para>
495 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Service Manager</guilabel></term>
497 <listitem><para>The Service Manager module displays a static list of
498 services that are started on demand, and a second list of services that can
499 be manipulated by the user. The services in the first list cannot be
500 modified or changed. The services in the second list you can enable or
501 disable a service loading at start up, and manually start and stop
506 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Session Manager</guilabel></term>
508 <listitem><para>Here you can configure how you would like &kde; to handle
509 sessions. You can configure &kde; to remember your previous session and
510 restore the applications you were using the next time you log in. You can
511 also specify individual applications to exclude from being restored, or
512 disable restoring sessions on login entirely.</para>
516 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Spell Checker</guilabel></term>
518 <listitem><para>This module allows you to configure the &kde; Spell
519 checker. It allows you to modify what spell checker to use, what types of
520 error to check for and also what default dictionary to use. &kde; supports
521 the use of both <application>ASpell</application> and
522 <application>ISpell.</application></para>
527 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Vim Component Configuration</guilabel></term>
529 <listitem><para>This module allows you to configure the use of
530 <application>Vim</application> as an embeddable component. You need to have
531 a recent version of <application>Gvim</application> or
532 <application>Kvim</application> installed for this. You can configure the
533 appearance of the editor as well as which <command>vim</command> binary to
540 <!-- Add links to "further reading" here -->
542 <title>Related Information</title>
543 <listitem><para>to be written</para>
550 <sect1 id="kcontrol-peripherals">
559 <title>Peripherals</title>
561 <para>This section is where you would change settings related to peripheral
562 devices such as keyboards and joysticks.</para>
565 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Display</guilabel></term>
567 <listitem><para>Here you can modify settings to do with the size,
568 orientation and refresh rate of your display, and whether you would like
569 these settings to be applied on &kde; startup. On the <guilabel>Power
570 Control</guilabel> tab, you can configure your power management options for
571 this screen such as blanking. </para></listitem>
574 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Joystick</guilabel></term>
576 <listitem><para>This section allows you to configure your joystick and test
577 that it is working properly. You can also calibrate your joystick here, and
578 manually specify the joystick device if it is not autodetected correctly.
582 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Keyboard</guilabel></term>
584 <listitem><para>This module allows you to configure basic keyboard settings.
585 These include keyboard repeat delay and rate, and what state you would
586 prefer numlock to be on KDE startup.</para></listitem>
589 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Mouse</guilabel></term>
591 <listitem><para>Here is where you can configure settings to do with your
592 mouse device. You can switch the button order, reverse the scroll direction
593 or modify the behaviour of clickable icons. You may also preview, install
594 and select cursor themes. The <guilabel>Advanced</guilabel> tab allows you
595 to fine tune your mouse settings further.</para></listitem>
598 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Printers</guilabel></term>
600 <listitem><para> This dialog allows you to configure printers using a
601 variety of print systems. You can add local and remote printers, check
602 current jobs and look at printer properties.</para>
608 <!-- Add links to "further reading" here -->
610 <title>Related Information</title>
611 <listitem><para>to be written</para>
618 <sect1 id="kcontrol-power-control">
628 <title>Power Control</title>
630 <para>This section has a single module, <guilabel>Laptop Battery</guilabel>.
631 Here you can configure the appearance and behaviour of the <application>Klaptopdaemon</application>
632 battery monitor. You can select battery icons to represent different power states, and set up
633 notification of certain events. In the case that your battery runs down to a critical level, you can
634 configure the daemon to suspend or shutdown your laptop, to save you from losing data.
637 <!-- Add links to "further reading" here -->
639 <title>Related Information</title>
640 <listitem><para>to be written</para>
646 <sect1 id="kcontrol-regional-and-accessibility">
656 <title>Regional & Accessibility</title>
657 <para>This section is where you can configure options to do with region
658 and locale, and also acessibility related options for disabled
663 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Accessibility</guilabel></term>
665 <listitem><para>Here is where you can configure options for users who have
666 difficulty hearing system sounds or using a keyboard. You can configure the
667 system bell to use a visual signal, such as flashing the screen or inverting
668 screen colors. You can also configure keyboard accessibility options such
669 as sticky keys and slow keys.</para></listitem>
672 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Country/Region & Language</guilabel></term>
674 <listitem><para>This module allows you to configure options that are
675 specific to your location such as language, currency and date format. To
676 make available more languages, install the kde-i18n packages for your
677 distribution.</para></listitem>
680 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Input Actions</guilabel></term>
682 <listitem><para>Here is where you would configure input actions, such as
683 mouse gestures and keyboard shotcuts for launching applications and running
684 commands.</para></listitem>
687 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Keyboard Layout</guilabel></term>
689 <listitem><para>This module is where you would configure
690 <application>Kxkb</application>, a keyboard layout switching utility that
691 uses the &X-Window; xkb extension. It allows you to switch between different
692 layouts using a tray indicator or a keyboard shortcut. You can
693 enable/disable keyboard layouts through this dialog, and add more. Some of
694 the more powerful features are the ability to configure switching of layouts
695 globally, per application or per window.</para></listitem>
698 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Keyboard Shortcuts</guilabel></term>
700 <listitem><para>Here you can configure global &kde; keyboard
701 shortcuts. There are several predefined shortcut schemes you can use if you
702 are more used to another windowing environment, like &Windows; or
703 &MacOS;. If you prefer, you can customise your own scheme and modifier keys.
708 <!-- Add links to "further reading" here -->
710 <title>Related Information</title>
711 <listitem><para>to be written</para>
718 <sect1 id="kcontrol-security-and-privacy">
723 &Anne-Marie.Mahfouf.mail;
726 <firstname>Javier</firstname>
727 <surname>Martín Diez</surname>
729 <othercredit role="reviewer">
730 <personname><firstname>Rocco</firstname> <surname>Stanzione</surname>
735 <title>Security & Privacy</title>
737 <para>This section is where you can configure options related to
738 security and privacy such as the use of cryptography, enabling the KDE
739 wallet, setting your identity and managing caches.</para>
742 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Crypto</guilabel></term>
743 <listitem><para>This module allows you to configure SSl for use with most
744 KDE applications, as well as manage your personal certificates
745 and the known certificate authorities.</para></listitem>
748 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>KDE Wallet</guilabel></term>
750 Here you can change your KDE Wallet Manager settings.</para>
752 <para>KDE Wallet aims to provide secure storage for passwords and web form data.
753 You can group different passwords in different wallets, and each one will only
754 be opened with a master password (which you should never forget!). The
755 default wallet is named "kdewallet", and you can either create a new wallet
756 for your local passwords or accept the default wallet for all data in
757 the "Automatic Wallet Selection" section.</para>
759 <para>KDE programs like Konqueror, Kmail and Kopete are fully compatible with
760 the KDE Wallet Manager. All of them will ask at least once for permission to
761 access to actual wallet. You can give different access levels, such as "always
762 allow", "allow once", etc. If you want to change that access level, you can do
763 it from the "Access Control" tab by deleting the program entry and selecting a
764 new preference the next time that application requests access to the
769 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Wallet Preferences</guilabel></term>
771 <listitem><para>To enable the KDE wallet subsystem, check the <guilabel>
772 Enable the KDE wallet subsystem</guilabel> box.
773 Unchecking this box will disable the KDE Wallet on your system.</para>
775 <para>By default, KDE Wallet Manager is kept opened until the
776 user session is closed, but you can change that in the <guilabel>Close
777 Wallet</guilabel> section to close it when unused for a time, when a screen
778 saver starts or when the last application stops using it.</para>
780 <para>As you can have several wallets, <guilabel>Automatic Wallet
781 Selection</guilabel> allows you start KDE with a given wallet.</para>
783 <para>KDE Wallet will appear in your system tray by default, but you can hide
784 it. Uncheck <guilabel>Show manager in the system tray</guilabel> to keep it
785 always hidden, or check <guilabel>Hide system tray icon when last wallet
786 closes</guilabel> to hide it only when all wallets are closed. These items are
787 in the <guilabel>Wallet Manager</guilabel> section.</para></listitem>
791 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Access Control</guilabel></term>
793 <listitem><para>You can set here what policy you want for your
794 KDE applications, regarding to the wallet use.</para></listitem>
802 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Password & User Account</guilabel></term>
803 <listitem><para>You can change here your personal information
804 which will be used in mail programs and word processors. You
805 can change your login password by clicking the <guibutton>Change
806 Password...</guibutton> button.</para></listitem>
809 <varlistentry><term><guilabel>Privacy</guilabel></term>
810 <listitem><para>This module allows you to erase traces which
811 KDE leaves on your system such as command histories or
812 browser caches.</para></listitem>
819 <!-- <sect1 id="kcontrol-sound-and-multimedia">
820 <title>Sound & Multimedia</title>
821 <para>to be written</para>
824 <title>Related Information</title>
825 <listitem><para></para>
831 <sect1 id="kcontrol-system-administration">
841 <title>System Administration</title>
842 <para>This module allows you to configure aspects of your system such as
843 the bootloader, the kernel and helps you perform essential system tasks. Most of these
844 sections will require the root or Administrator password to effect changes.</para>
848 <term><guilabel>Boot Manager (LILO)</guilabel></term>
849 <listitem><para>If you use the popular bootloader
850 <acronym>LILO</acronym> this section will allow you to configure it.
851 You can configure the location to install the bootloader to, set the timeout
852 on the <acronym>LILO</acronym> boot screen as well as add or modify
853 kernel images for the boot list.</para>
858 <term><guilabel>Date & Time</guilabel></term>
859 <listitem><para>This configuration module allows you to configure the system date and time
860 settings. You can set the date, time, and also the current time zone. These settings will be applied system-wide.</para></listitem>
864 <term><guilabel>Font Installer</guilabel></term>
865 <listitem><para>Here is where you would configure both personal and system-wide fonts.
866 This dialog allows you to install new fonts, delete old ones and preview the fonts you
867 have installed. By default, it displays personal fonts. To modify system-wide fonts click the <guibutton>Administrator Mode</guibutton> button.</para> </listitem>
870 <term><guilabel>IBM Thinkpad Laptop</guilabel></term>
871 <listitem><para>This configuration module allows you to configure the special keys on an IBM thinkpad
872 laptop. You will need the <quote>nvram</quote> module to use these features.</para></listitem>
875 <term><guilabel>Linux Kernel</guilabel></term>
876 <listitem><para>If you run &kde; on &Linux; there is a &kcontrol; module to create or modify
877 configuration files for a &Linux; kernel. This configurator is compatible with kernels previous to 2.5.</para></listitem>
880 <term><guilabel>Login Manager</guilabel></term>
881 <listitem><para>This module allows you to configure the &kde; login manager, &kdm;. &kdm; is
882 a powerful login manager with a large range of options. It supports user switching, remote graphical logins and has a fully customizable appearance. For more information, see the &kdm; handbook. </para></listitem>
885 <term><guilabel>Paths</guilabel></term>
886 <listitem><para>This dialog allows you to configure the default locations where certain
887 important files are kept. The <guilabel>Desktop</guilabel> directory contains all the files on your desktop. The <guilabel>Autostart</guilabel> directory contains files or links to files that you want run when &kde; starts, and the <guilabel>Documents</guilabel> directory is the default location &kde; applications will open or save documents to.</para></listitem>
890 <term><guilabel>Sony Vaio Laptop</guilabel></term>
891 <listitem><para>This configuration module allows you to configure features specific to
892 Sony Vaio laptops. If you have a Sony Vaio, you will have to install the <quote>sonypi</quote>
893 driver to use this section.</para></listitem>
896 <!-- Add links to "further reading" here -->
898 <title>Related Information</title>
899 <listitem><para>to be written</para>
905 <!-- Keep this comment at the end of the file
910 sgml-namecase-general:nil
911 sgml-general-insert-case:lower
912 sgml-minimize-attributes:nil
913 sgml-always-quote-attributes:t
915 sgml-indent-data:true
916 sgml-parent-document:("index.docbook" "book" "chapter")
917 sgml-exposed-tags:nil
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919 sgml-local-ecat-files:nil