On Wed, Sep 2, 2009 at 9:13 PM, Nick Jenkins wrote: >> > > It would be a lot better if instead of greying out the >> > > "send/receive" button if it switched to saying "work online" <snip> > > I'm kind of with the original poster. <snip> > > So to me, it makes sense to try doing something different with this > button in offline mode. Some possibilities for discussion: > * good: if the button's tooltip changed in offline mode to say "You > cannot send and receive because you are currently offline", that might > help people somewhat. > * better: toggle this button to mean "work online". > * best: toggle this button to mean "work online and then send/receive". > If the button is clicked and Evo can't go online for some reason, give > the user a popup dialog notifying them of this.
I completely agree. In fact, I'd take it a step further... every greyed out button in every application should have some obvious help like Nick has suggested. When I become benevolent dictator, I shall mandate this... violators will see my non-benevolent side. ;) In another email, somebody suggested a highly noticeable banner, but I prefer Nick's solutions because they use currently worthless GUI real estate (the greyed out button) to tell you what the problem is and the same solution could be applied to most applications. No matter how obvious the banner is, to me it's less obvious than the button itself providing the information. If multiple buttons are greyed out for different reasons, you don't need to go looking through a banner to find out which current state might be resulting in the button that you want to push being greyed out. Cheers... David _______________________________________________ Evolution-list mailing list Evolution-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list