Version: (using KDE 4.2.0) OS: Linux Installed from: Ubuntu Packages When using the "leave" menu option or the "logout" widget, KDE presents a window with three choices: logout, "turn off" and "restart". On top of the "turn off" button one can find a small pull-down triangle that can be used to NOT turn off the computer but to suspend to ram/disk. It happened several times to me, that I missed to "pull down" the right way. So instead of suspend-to-ram I selected "turn off". But these are two really different actions with really different consequences! They SHOULD NOT be "that close" UI wise. Sometimes people act in a hurry - a user interface should be forgiving ... and not using a "worst case" choice as default. You see, when I want to "suspend to ram" i have many programs running. I really dont want to shutdown! xfce and gnome provide different buttons for these actions. You say "quit" and you have a set of buttons that are clearly seperated. Why is KDE different here? A minimum requirement would be to have this CONFIGURABLE!
I'm surprised that so few people have complained about this, the current setup is bound to cause pain and anguish world wide! Separate buttons definitely required.
*** Bug 194851 has been marked as a duplicate of this bug. ***
*** Bug 197164 has been marked as a duplicate of this bug. ***
This has been fixed for a long time with Plasma5 and should be closed
Yeah, this is fixed now.