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But nautilus-burn does it for me, in a far nicer way. Third party applications like Brasero can always be installed if you need them specifically, but tightly integrated services like nautilus-burn add some real value to the desktop that "normal" applications can't provide. Or maybe you just meant that Brasero should become a part of the GNOME project in some way or another, there would be nothing wrong with that of course.
Nautilus burn needs, at least IMO, a user interface improvement. I've found many people that thinks that ubuntu can't burn cds because the nautilus burning interface is not...very easy to "find". They ask me what they should to to install a program that does it (and then i tell them to install K3B, which rocks, just to avoid them confusion)
For me, nautilus-burn really doesn't do it for me because you can't brn iso images - sure, I drop to command line and do it manually, but at the same time, I would have thought that along with packet based writing (treating a cd/dvd like any other storage), image writing would be quite important.
The only thing I cannot understand is why isn't
mutisession support included.
I found nautilus burn to be most reliable gnome burner (probably it has interaction with gnome volume manager sorted out best) but lack of such basic functionality makes it useless for great part of users.
That's a shame, because having a one click burner would be very convenient.






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Member since:
2005-06-28
I am running Gnome 2.18 right now on my ubuntu feisty. Pretty good release, but no major new things in it. I hope Brasero makes it on Gnome btw. Nautilus-burn doesn't do it for me.