Re: Launching an application requires too many mouse clicks in Gnome 3



Thanks for the tip. Though, I already know how to use dash.

I guess dash/dock is mainly for the applications which used most often,
and categorised application menu is for those applications which is only
occasionally accessed. And even I already have 15 icons on my dock, I
still find myself opening program menu to search for seldom used
applications from time to time.

On a side note, I really like to see kind of a 'switchable' dock so I
could change set of applications on it according to task currently I'm
on. For example, when I do some music related work, I often use jackd
related applications like ardour, hydrogen, lv2rack and etc. Though
other times, I don't want those icons to clutter my dock, as I rather
want to have more general set of applications at hand, like a web
browser and a terminal, and so on.

2011-09-04 (일), 02:10 -0400, Jasper St. Pierre:
> You can pin apps to the dash by dragging them there, or right-click on
> its icon in the dash.
> 
> On Sun, Sep 4, 2011 at 1:43 AM, Xavier Cho <fender_rules yahoo co kr> wrote:
> > I've been using Gnome 3 for some months, and overall I think it's definitely
> > a step in the right direction. However, as a long time Gnome 1&2 user, I
> > find it lacking in some aspects in terms of usability and features.
> > Most of all, I think Gnome 3 requires too much user interaction when
> > navigating in the program menu. In the days of global application menu, when
> > you need to launch an application all you need to do was 1) click on the
> > panel menu icon, 2) and navigate by hovering your mouse over the categories,
> > 3) then click on the application. All it needed was 2 clicks and minimal
> > mouse movement.
> > However in Gnome 3, you need first 1) move your mouse to the upper left
> > corner of the screen, 2) and click on the programs menu, 3) wait couple of
> > seconds (especially when you click it for the first time), 4) move your
> > mouse to the opposite end of the screen to click through the application
> > categories, 5) and again move your mouse pointer to where the application
> > is, 6) and finally click on the icon to launch it.
> > In summary, now it requires 3 + number of categories clicks and much more
> > mouse traversal to lauch an application, which I feel a setback in terms of
> > user experience compared to Gnome 1&2.
> > I believe the situation would be much better if we could make the categories
> > traversable by mouse hover instead of clicks, and move the category menu to
> > the left side to make it close to the hot spot on the upper left corner of
> > the screen. And it'd reduce the unnecessary delay if it displays selected
> > few favorite, or most often used applications instead of showing all of them
> > when you click on the program menu. I guess even providing an alternative
> > hot spot, say lower left corner of the screen to access the program menu
> > directly would make it on par with Gnome 2 in terms of mouse clicks needed
> > for an application launch.
> > I suppose the direction Gnome 3 is moving toward is providing a simple,
> > unified desktop environment for variety of devices, including tablets and
> > even smart phones. However, I believe simplicity in software doesn't always
> > lies in 'eliminating' features, but usually in intuitive design and 'hiding'
> > advanced features.
> > Suppose, there's some basic tasks which most of the users performs often -
> > like launching an application from program menu - consists roughly 30% of
> > all desktop features. And there's features which more advanced users need or
> > which are not used frequently, like customizing desktop fonts, would
> > consists another 30% of the features. And finally there's remaining 40% of
> > the features which would rarely be accessed or by expert users or
> > developers.
> > Then you need to make those basic 30% of features readily accessible - no
> > keyboard short cuts, no redundant mouse clicks) in a most intuitive and
> > simple way. And you can still expose the advanced 30% of features accessible
> > from GUI, but hidden from casual users, preferably by providing 'advanced'
> > button like many applications do.
> > For the remaining expert features, I guess executing terminal commands or
> > changing gconf values to access them shouldn't be much problem.
> > So, I'd like to suggest we should collect and priotize all the planned or
> > implemented features in Gnome 3 according to a criteria similar to the above
> > mentioned, then re-evaluate their accessibility and usability according to
> > their nature. So if there's some basic tasks like accessing an application
> > menu requiring too much mouse interaction, or some non expert features like
> > chaging desktop fonts missing from the control panel, we could easily detect
> > such problem and fix it in a consistent way if there's such a design
> > principle understood and agreed upon among the most developers and users.
> > I guess Gnome desktop has come a long way, and now it's not uncommon to see
> > non tech-savy people use it as their primary work environment. So, it's all
> > about user experience and usability which really matters and would put Gnome
> > ahead of other competitors.
> >
> > Xavier Cho
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > desktop-devel-list mailing list
> > desktop-devel-list gnome org
> > http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list
> >
> 
> 
> 




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