Keywords[fr]=mot de passe,mots de passe,kdesu,caractères d'affichage,mémoriser les mots de passe,mémorisation des mots de passe,enregistrement des mots de passe,enregistrer les mots de passe,délai,sécurité
Keywords[fr]=mot de passe,mots de passe,tdesu,caractères d'affichage,mémoriser les mots de passe,mémorisation des mots de passe,enregistrement des mots de passe,enregistrer les mots de passe,délai,sécurité
@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ url="http://www.konqueror.org">http://www.konqueror.org</ulink> where a
<qandaentry>
<question><para>Can I run &konqueror; without running &kde;?</para></question>
<answer><para>Yes. Just install &Qt;, kdelibs and kdebase, and from your favorite window manager just launch &konqueror;. It should work just fine, but if it doesn't (&kde; developers don't test that case often), report it to http://bugs.kde.org and try running "kdeinit" before running &konqueror;, it usually helps.
<answer><para>Yes. Just install &Qt;, kdelibs and kdebase, and from your favorite window manager just launch &konqueror;. It should work just fine, but if it doesn't (&kde; developers don't test that case often), report it to http://bugs.kde.org and try running "tdeinit" before running &konqueror;, it usually helps.
This is of course the same for any other &kde; application. </para>
<listitem><para>See <ulink url="http://kontact.kde.org">http://kontact.kde.org</ulink> and <ulink url="http://kdepim.kde.org">http://kdepim.kde.org</ulink> for more information.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>See <ulink url="http://kontact.kde.org">http://kontact.kde.org</ulink> and <ulink url="http://tdepim.kde.org">http://tdepim.kde.org</ulink> for more information.</para></listitem>
<para>Some &Linux; distributions have tried to stress this point so much that they have disabled the <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> account altogether, and instead use the <command>sudo</command> model. Nevertheless, the basic security model in <command>sudo</command> is the same as <command>su</command>, and thus they share the same security strengths and weaknesses, essentially.</para>
<para>If you should ever need to run a program with Super User privileges, then it is always recommend that you use &kdesu;. From &konsole; or from hitting <keycombo action="simul">&Alt;<keycap>F2</keycap></keycombo>, enter <userinput>kdesu <replaceable>application</replaceable></userinput>, and the application will be run with the appropriate Super User privileges. </para>
<para>If you should ever need to run a program with Super User privileges, then it is always recommend that you use &tdesu;. From &konsole; or from hitting <keycombo action="simul">&Alt;<keycap>F2</keycap></keycombo>, enter <userinput>tdesu <replaceable>application</replaceable></userinput>, and the application will be run with the appropriate Super User privileges. </para>
<para>Even if you have set up your system to use <command>sudo</command>, or you are on a distribution that uses <command>sudo</command>, such as &kubuntu;, you should still use &kdesu;. The program will be appropriately modified by the developers to use the correct settings. You should not, however, ever use <command>sudo <replaceable>application</replaceable></command> to run an application with <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> permissions; it can derange permissions of certain configuration files for a program. Running a graphical applications as <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> in general is not a good idea, but using &kdesu; will always be your safest bet with it.</para>
<para>Even if you have set up your system to use <command>sudo</command>, or you are on a distribution that uses <command>sudo</command>, such as &kubuntu;, you should still use &tdesu;. The program will be appropriately modified by the developers to use the correct settings. You should not, however, ever use <command>sudo <replaceable>application</replaceable></command> to run an application with <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> permissions; it can derange permissions of certain configuration files for a program. Running a graphical applications as <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> in general is not a good idea, but using &tdesu; will always be your safest bet with it.</para>
1) The KDE daemon, 'kded' is not running. You can restart it by running the command 'kdeinit' and then try reloading the KDE Control Center to see if this message goes away.
1) The KDE daemon, 'kded' is not running. You can restart it by running the command 'tdeinit' and then try reloading the KDE Control Center to see if this message goes away.
2) You don't appear to have smartcard support in the KDE libraries. You will need to recompile the kdelibs package with libpcsclite installed.</string>