On 6 July 2011 13:04, Omer Akram <om26er.l...@gmail.com> wrote: [snip]
> Good news, in Oneiric system settings will be removed from the SessionMenu > and an icon for it will be placed in the launcher by default, It'll probably > happen around alpha-3 I guess :-) That is not good news at all. The launcher is being abused. It should not have a list of mounted devices and it should not have an icon for system settings. Mounted devices should have an indicator and system settings should have an icon in the dash. That is to say, it should have its own lense. With regard to mounted devices, I feel strongly that they should have their own indicator for these reasons: * Users don't understand why it's important to unmount them before unplugging them, but they will do so by mistake and discover that it does no harm. By using an indicator, we can use a green icon when the user unmounts them correctly and a red one when they don't, leading them onto the right path. Poeople do want to do the right thing. * Placing mounted devices in the launcher makes the launcher cluttered and people will not be bothered to search for them in order to unmount, for instance when they're in a hurry or is under stress. * The launcher should be for "apps". Trash, desktop and window switching are valid exceptions, but it must not become a slippery slope. The launcher is only effective when it only does what the user does often. If it becomes filled with other stuff, then it will become less inviting. I feel that configurations should be placed in a lense with an icon in the dash for these reasons: * Configuring and using are different things. So far we've only had Preferences and Administration, but this has to change. We should reach for a way to configure all applications from the same place. You will not access Firefox' settings from Firefox' menus, but from TCS (The Configuration Screen). The settings will be available from GSettings and therefore it is no longer necessary for each application to provide their own, non-uniform, config dialogs. They will still be available, of course, but users of Ubuntu will not have to search for them. They will just press the Ubuntu button, tap or click Configure and select the application they want to configure. Unity should provide a unified way of accessing all common features of all applications. There is no unity without unification. This is quite obviously the right way to do this, so we should prepare for it as soon as possible, even though some applications won't be configurable that way -- yet. _______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~ayatana Post to : ayatana@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~ayatana More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp