On 04/13/2010 04:44 PM, Tomasz Sterna wrote:
I never really thought about that possibility. The sidebar seems like a good place for this to me as well. And I can't stand that messaging menu personally; Ubuntu patches applications so you have to use their menu if you want anything close to a notification area icon, which is rather unfair considering that there's lots of distributions based on Ubuntu (like Linux Mint).Dnia 2010-04-13, wto o godzinie 09:52 -0500, Ryan Peters pisze:I simply mean to suggest an alternate, somewhat more organized way to handle minimization. I like that "docking" concept you mentioned, but why would it have to be separate from minimization? Is there a need to develop an add-on/extension/plugin/patch for it? The issue that my design fixes is Problem 3, which could be more easily worded like this: "What if I want an application running in the background while being easily controllable without disrupting my work-flow (un-minimizing it)?".I don't like the windows taskbar concept. I never liked it, from the very beginning Windows 95 introduced it and hate that every other OS copied it verbatim (KDE, GNOME, etc.) or some varianto of it (MacOS Dock). I loved the decision Gnome Shell to finally get rid of it. Activities overview is soooo much nicer and intuitive. But I see your point. There is a use case in presenting actions menu for background applications. They don't even need to be minimised. I think this functionality should be added to the Activities application icon on the sidebar. Gnome Shell could provide an API which applications could use to add items to the application icon on the Activities sidebar. We could use application .desktop file for this, similarly how new Ubuntu Indicator Applet uses it. https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MessagingMenu#API _______________________________________________ gnome-shell-list mailing list gnome-shell-list gnome org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-shell-list About the API, why not just carry over the old one for the notification area to have compatibility with applications from other desktop environments (like KDE)? |