
If there are two things in this apartment that I don't like, that would first be the dog upstairs which barks at 5 AM almost every morning, and the fact that UPS almost never deliver things on our door. They never bother to check if we are in. The SuSE people were very kind to send us the Professional version of
SuSE 8.1, but unfortunately, I received it 10 days later after it arrived in the apartment's complex. But now we got it here, we gave it a spin for almost a week, and here is what we think about it.
> Actually I find that it is a very nice thing for them to do: if beauty can conflict with safety: safety first!!
I do not think that this is correct. To change a font, you need to go to KDE's menu panel and then click "Apply". If you do have chosen a really bad font, you just click again to the font panel (you don't need to "read" which one exactly it is, it is obvious which one is) and then revert the font back.
YaST2 has NOTHING about fonts, so if you want to fix your fonts after screwing them up, you just go back to the KDE control panel, NOT to YaST2.
In other words, YaST2 does NOT have a real reason for having a hardcoded font. Not a reason at all. It should pick up automatically the default KDE application font.