Translations by MelMazzone

MelMazzone has submitted the following strings to this translation. Contributions are visually coded: currently used translations, unreviewed suggestions, rejected suggestions.

19 of 9 results
1.
Your names
2009-11-27
This is a dummy translation so that the credits are counted as translated.
2006-06-02
_: Melchior Mazzone↵
2.
Your emails
2009-11-27
This is a dummy translation so that the credits are counted as translated.
2006-06-02
_: mel@mazzone.info↵
3.
Print management as normal user Some print management operations may need administrator privileges. Use the "Administrator Mode" button below to start this print management tool with administrator privileges.
2006-06-02
Print management as normal user Some print management operations may need administrator privileges. Use the "Administrator Mode" button below to start this print management tool with administrator privileges.
4.
kcmprintmgr
2006-06-02
kcmprintmgr
5.
KDE Printing Management
2006-06-02
KDE Printing Management
6.
(c) 2000 - 2002 Michael Goffioul
2006-06-02
(c) 2000 - 2002 Michael Goffioul
7.
<h1>Printers</h1>The KDE printing manager is part of KDEPrint which is the interface to the real print subsystem of your Operating System (OS). Although it does add some additional functionality of its own to those subsystems, KDEPrint depends on them for its functionality. Spooling and filtering tasks, especially, are still done by your print subsystem, or the administrative tasks (adding or modifying printers, setting access rights, etc.)<br/> What print features KDEPrint supports is therefore heavily dependent on your chosen print subsystem. For the best support in modern printing, the KDE Printing Team recommends a CUPS based printing system.
2006-06-02
<h1>Printers</h1>The KDE printing manager is part of KDEPrint which is the interface to the real print subsystem of your Operating System (OS). Although it does add some additional functionality of its own to those subsystems, KDEPrint depends on them for its functionality. Spooling and filtering tasks, especially, are still done by your print subsystem, or the administrative tasks (adding or modifying printers, setting access rights, etc.)<br/> What print features KDEPrint supports is therefore heavily dependent on your chosen print subsystem. For the best support in modern printing, the KDE Printing Team recommends a CUPS based printing system.