Re: $HOME as desktop
- From: Seth Nickell <snickell stanford edu>
- To: nautilus-list gnome org
- Cc: desktop-devel-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: $HOME as desktop
- Date: 17 May 2003 15:17:27 -0700
My thinking on the issue is....
1) From a clean slate, Desktop and Home should probably be the same
thing.
2) As part of a coherent goal for GNOME's deep interaction structures it
might be worth making $HOME be the desktop some day.
but
3) I think the usability cost of the $HOME transition *in isolation*
exceeds the benefits. Basically, I don't think its worth doing for its
own sake at this point.
-Seth
On Fri, 2003-05-16 at 13:58, Owen Taylor wrote:
> I really hesitate to jump in here, but I think it's
> worth stating clearly why $HOME as desktop isn't an
> option:
>
> - Upgrades: user upgrades to Red Hat 14.7. Suddenly,
> they have 531 files on their desktop, many of
> which don't fit on the screen. Unless they think
> to "clean up", some of these files may be lost
> forever because they are way off the screen.
>
> I think it's unreasonable to expect users to
> spend a day cleaning their home directory just
> because they switched to a new version of GNOME.
>
> - We don't control the other software the user
> runs, we don't control what software they run
> in the past; you may claim that everybody
> should change, but that isn't realistic; looking
> in my home directory.
>
> dcc - xchat is broken
> evolution - evolution is broken
> nsmail - Netscape 4 was broken several years ago
> GNUstep - wmaker was broken when I tried to
> reproduce a bug yesterday
> Mail - various traditionally unixy things are broken
> News - Gnus is broken
> Desktop - KDE is broken
>
> You get the picture. If we made $HOME the desktop
> we force the user to choose between having useless
> cruft on their desktop and not using other software.
>
> - Quality user experience depends on consistency;
> not just within GNOME, but for all apps. How
> are Mozilla, and OpenOffice.org, and the
> Java file selector, and ... going to get the
> behavior right if GNOME uses ~ and KDE uses Desktop/ ?
>
> Perhaps using $HOME is logically right, but practically
> speaking I can't see how it is even a possibility at
> all. We need to use ~/Desktop, and we need to spend our
> ingenuity in making that seem as consistent and robust
> as possible.
>
> Regards,
> Owen
>
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