Re: [Nautilus-list] GNOME user environment brainstorming
- From: eem12 cornell edu
- To: Havoc Pennington <hp redhat com>
- Cc: nautilus-list eazel com, gnome-love gnome org, gnome-2-0-list gnome org, Calum Benson <calum benson ireland sun com>, "James M. Cape" <jcape ignore-your tv>, Anna Dirks <anna ximian com>, Joakim Ziegler <joakim ximian com>
- Subject: Re: [Nautilus-list] GNOME user environment brainstorming
- Date: Thu, 24 May 2001 19:19:13 -0400 (EDT)
Two cents from a list lurker ...
On 24 May 2001, Havoc Pennington wrote:
> Somewhere to Start
> ===
>
> A problem with the current desktop is that there's no clear "center" to
> it where you can find important information such as the control
> center, help browser, etc. We work around this a bit by adding
> shortcuts to the panel, but other than that you have to dive in to the
> forbidding and totally unusable Programs menu. If you change your
> panel icons, suddenly you can't find important stuff.
IMO, the complexity of the Panel should be controlled by user levels as
well. Will novice user understand the idea of multiple desktops? Will
they ever even have enough windows open to need it?
Along the same lines, in Beginner mode the Foot icon should probably have
a tooltip or some other means of drawing attention to it (perhaps pulsing
for a few seconds after login?), if that's going to continue being the
suggested way to launch apps. IIRC the original Win95 Explorer had an
animated arrow that highlighted the Start Button.
> - desktop is for:
> - user shortcuts to programs, etc.
> - showing removable devices
> - Trash, Home, Start Here icons
If so, there should be an easy way to hide/show all open windows, a la
MacOS and KDE.
> - panel is for navigation of tasks/desktop, and for info applets such
> as clock, etc. It also has the foot menu, which probably needs some
> rethinking on what it contains.
A Good Idea(tm) might be organizing by action rather than by application:
Create a ...
Spreadsheet
Diagram
Letter
Graphic
Open a Document
Communicate by ...
E-mail
Instant Messaging
Explore ...
My Stuff
My Computer
Computers on My Network
Redhat.com (suse.com, etc.)
The Web
Change settings for ...
My Desktop
My Computer
Computers on My Network
Help
Start a Program
Quit
... where Start a Program is pretty much what the Programs menu is today,
but better organized and more intelligent (hide infrequently-used items,
etc.)
> - foot menu rationalization:
> - probably remove Applets, KDE menus, and Panel submenus here at least
> - s/Run.../Run Program.../
IMO, "Start" or "Launch" is a more accurate (and action-oriented :)
adjective than "Run."
> - add Start Here menu item to open Start Here
Might this be on the Panel instead of hidden in a menu? After all, it
_is_ called "Start Here" ...
> - Kill task menu on desk guide, the menu is confusing and the arrow is
> cluttered-looking
Agreed
> Default prefs
> ===
>
> - disable tearoff menus by default
> - disable tearoff menubars by default
> - disable in-place menu accelerator changing by default
GTK's timeout for diagonal menu navigation is really not very forgiving.
Making this longer (or infinite) would make things easier for novices.
> Nautilus
> ===
> - Downplay web browser aspect; Mozilla/Galeon encouraged for real
> browsing. (Alternative: follow Galeon and try to be a full web
> browser, but seems like it would cause a lot of clutter.)
Is Galeon going to be a core part of GNOME?
> Miscellanea
> ===
>
> - unlock screen dialog from xscreensaver is ugly and doesn't look
> integrated, and the entry won't be accessible, use the standard
> key shortcuts, etc. So we need a GTK-ized xscreensaver unlock dialog.
> This will get jwz flaming left and right, and requires some
> nontrivial engineering due to suid issues, but such is life.
Call it gscreensaver :)
-ed
[
Date Prev][
Date Next] [
Thread Prev][
Thread Next]
[
Thread Index]
[
Date Index]
[
Author Index]