Re: idea to end browser and spatial problems
- From: Sriram Ramkrishna <sri aracnet com>
- To: Donald Henson <tcrf tcrf com>
- Cc: Nautilus List <nautilus-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: idea to end browser and spatial problems
- Date: Fri, 14 May 2004 09:35:36 -0700
On Wed, May 12, 2004 at 03:03:06PM -0600, Donald Henson wrote:
> On Wed, 2004-05-12 at 12:51, Alan wrote:
> > On Tue, May 11, 2004 at 07:05:04AM -0700, David Wagoner wrote:
> > > Well here is my idea on how to make everyone happy
> > > with the whole spatial vs browser situation. Instead
> > > of using a gconf entry make a preferences option for
> > > nautilus which will allow users to select which mode
> > > they want. This will make it easy for new users to
> > > disable it if they dont like it since preferences is
> > > the first spot people check to change things.
> >
> > Why not just make it easier to switch between the two? The mac finder
> > has a button on the top right of each finder window which essencially
> > switches between spatial and browser view. Would it be possible to add
> > something like this to nautilus? Have a button or toggle somewhere
> > which basically just switches from browser style to spatial style?
> >
> > There probably isn't a way to do this directly (IIRC spatial and browser
> > mode are completely different codebases), but there might be some sort
> > of magic that allows this or can fake it.
> >
> > Just a thought. I have been using spatial for a while and still find
> > that there are times I prefer to use browser mode, and sometimes it's a
> > PITA to navigate down to the same location via the browser instead of
> > just being able to change modes.
> >
> > Alan
>
> Yes. Choice. That's what we need.
Well, a bookmarking system would probably be better here. I usually
work around it by adding launchers to take me to common places. Maybe adding a "Places" menu where one could add the bookmarks might be appropriate.
I personally love spatial. It's very intuitive for me because
I generally use it to manage files. I do not however use it to
browse around places. I generally have a place to go rather than
looking around.
What we're seeing here (obviously) is a culture clash between windows
world and GNOME world.
As Jim said earlier, I think it's really a question of how we use our
desktops here. Do we browse or do we do something else. I don't browse
because the way I set up my desktop is very organized into particular
well defined chunks.
sri
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