The shell will request a password when an encrypted device or a remote filesystem is mounted. If the password can be saved for future use a “Remember Password” checkbox will be present. This key sets the default state of the checkbox.
The shell will request a password when an encrypted device or a remote filesystem is mounted. If the password can be saved for future use a “Remember Password” checkbox will be present. This key sets the default state of the checkbox.
The shell will request a password when an encrypted device or a remote filesystem is mounted. If the password can be saved for future use a “Remember Password” checkbox will be present. This key sets the default state of the checkbox.
The shell will request a password when an encrypted device or a remote filesystem is mounted. If the password can be saved for future use a “Remember Password” checkbox will be present. This key sets the default state of the checkbox.
Some systems support more than two power profiles. In order to still support toggling between two profiles, this key records the last selected non-default profile.
Some systems support more than two power profiles. In order to still support toggling between two profiles, this key records the last selected non-default profile.
Some systems support more than two power profiles. In order to still support toggling between two profiles, this key records the last selected non-default profile.
Some systems support more than two power profiles. In order to still support toggling between two profiles, this key records the last selected non-default profile.
This key determines for which version the “Welcome to GNOME” dialog was last shown. An empty string represents the oldest possible version, and a huge number will represent versions that do not exist yet. This huge number can be used to effectively disable the dialog.
This key determines for which version the “Welcome to GNOME” dialog was last shown. An empty string represents the oldest possible version, and a huge number will represent versions that do not exist yet. This huge number can be used to effectively disable the dialog.
This key determines for which version the “Welcome to GNOME” dialog was last shown. An empty string represents the oldest possible version, and a huge number will represent versions that do not exist yet. This huge number can be used to effectively disable the dialog.
This key determines for which version the “Welcome to GNOME” dialog was last shown. An empty string represents the oldest possible version, and a huge number will represent versions that do not exist yet. This huge number can be used to effectively disable the dialog.
Layout of the app picker. Each entry in the array is a page. Pages are stored in the order they appear in GNOME Shell. Each page contains an “application id” → 'data' pair. Currently, the following values are stored as 'data': • “position”: the position of the application icon in the page
Layout of the app picker. Each entry in the array is a page. Pages are stored in the order they appear in GNOME Shell. Each page contains an “application id” → 'data' pair. Currently, the following values are stored as 'data': • “position”: the position of the application icon in the page
Layout of the app picker. Each entry in the array is a page. Pages are stored in the order they appear in GNOME Shell. Each page contains an “application id” → 'data' pair. Currently, the following values are stored as 'data': • “position”: the position of the application icon in the page