Re: Progress bar on startup
- From: Christian Fredrik Kalager Schaller <Uraeus linuxrising org>
- To: Jonathan Blandford <jrb redhat com>
- Cc: desktop-devel-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: Progress bar on startup
- Date: 20 Sep 2002 22:51:32 +0200
This is probably a dumb argument, but personally I like 'seeing' GNOME
start through the progress bar. Simply because it makes the startup time
less eventless. What would be better idea I think than removing it would
be to replace it with some animation like windows has. That way we will
not get the effect of long wait with no action, then 3 seconds of icons
flying by. Instead we see GNOME 'loading' right from the start.
Christian
On Fri, 2002-09-20 at 22:38, Jonathan Blandford wrote:
> When I log in for the first time, I find that most of my time is loading
> libraries[1] from disk. The splash screen pops up, and sits for a while
> without actually updating anything. It then rushes through all icons
> almost immediately, then pops down. Half of the icons are the
> question-mark anyway, as they aren't listed in progress code. Logging
> out and back in immediately leads to a fully logged in state almost
> immediately.
>
> Given that machines are getting faster, and GNOME is getting much
> quicker to start up, what do people think of getting rid of the progress
> indicator? It doesn't really show any useful information right now.
> Alternately, we could try to delay the registering with the session
> manager until we're fully realized, which will delay the icon by a
> little. I can also add a sleep (5) to the settings daemon too. (-:
>
> Any thoughts? Anyone mind if I write up a patch to remove this
> functionality?
> -Jonathan
>
> [1] That's my theory, anyway...
> _______________________________________________
> desktop-devel-list mailing list
> desktop-devel-list gnome org
> http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list
>
[
Date Prev][
Date Next] [
Thread Prev][
Thread Next]
[
Thread Index]
[
Date Index]
[
Author Index]