Re: Removing 'Backgrounds and Emblems'
- From: Allan Day <allanpday gmail com>
- To: Charlie De <charliecoeli yahoo com>
- Cc: nautilus-list <nautilus-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: Removing 'Backgrounds and Emblems'
- Date: Tue, 03 Aug 2010 16:37:39 +0100
On Mon, 2010-08-02 at 06:06 -0700, Charlie De wrote:
> Thanks to Allan for the responses, but this comment I don't understand:
>
>
> > This is a highly non-standard usage! :) Photo ratings isn't
> > functionality that Nautilus should be providing, IMO.
> >
> > It sounds like you're using Nautilus like a photo management tool. There
> > are a couple of good apps for that on GNOME.
>
>
> Surely the emblem feature is 'agnostic', you're not specifying for what reasons
> it may or may not be used. Some may use it to rate photos, others to organize
> spreadsheets... all usage of the feature is valid, no?
Sure - you're right. I was (badly) suggesting that photo management
tools provide the kind of metadata-based file organisation which you
seem to have been emulating with emblems, but maybe I was wrong.
> Yes, you could say I use Nautilus like a photo management tool. The reason is
> that it is the best such tool available, far far better than any app dedicated
> to the purpose. I think I've tried just about all of them and they all suffer
> from the problem that they are not Nautilus. They offer a small subset of
> features I have in Nautilus and a few unnecessary bells and whistles on top.
Fair enough. :) I'm sure there are plenty of people who prefer to use a file manager to organise their photos.
> The comment you've made may have been valid if I had been demanding features
> specific to photo management, but I hadn't. The features I find indispensable
> in photo management, such as previews, emblems, sorting, launching of scripts,
> these are all generic features that apply to many types of files and types of
> usage.
I agree to a certain extent. Though those features are common to all
files, the kinds of organising and browsing functionality you want are
often different according to the type of file - you want to browse your
music by artist or your photos by date taken, for example. A photo
manager allows you to filter and organise by tag (the equivalent of
emblems). That's a big advantage for many people and its something you
can't do with a file manager.
The trend right now is towards customised interfaces for particular
kinds of files. That makes a lot of sense to me.
Allan
--
IRC: aday on irc.gnome.org
[
Date Prev][
Date Next] [
Thread Prev][
Thread Next]
[
Thread Index]
[
Date Index]
[
Author Index]