I think it would be neat to have main apps like FF have a # of tabs near the 
close symbol when in overview mode ad if you click the number you get an 
overview of all of the tabs.



-- Sent from my Palm Pre
On Mar 2, 2010 7:45 AM, Nguyen Thai Ngoc Duy <[email protected]> wrote: 

On 2/25/10, Apoorva Sharma <[email protected]> wrote:

> Gnome shell's method of switching and starting applications is quite 
original,

> and very useful. However, is suffers from one main drawback: the system 
for switching

> between open windows. Since the windows are shown as scaled down previews 
without

> titles in the overview, finding the window you want becomes difficult. 
This is

> because of two main reasons:



There are titles in overview mode, below each thumbnail. Although I

admit I rarely look at them, too small compared to window previews.

And the previews have all my attention from the first glance.



> Another problem, not specific to gnome shell, but rather to all operating 
systems,

> is the notion of tabbed browsing, tabbed documents, etc. Basically, many 
applications

> have implemented systems to allow what used to take multiple windows to be 
done

> in one, by tabbing the content of the windows. Lets take a look at some 
applications

> that have implemented this:

>

> Firefox

> Epiphany

> Nautilus

> The new GIMP

> Pidgin

> Epiphany

> Gedit

> etc.Furthermore, some applications would benefit from this, but haven't 
implemented

> tabs yet, e.g. OpenOffice

>

> The functionality provided by the tabs in these applications is the same. 
This

> is a lot of redundant code.

>

> To solve this issue and the previous one, we can implement tabs in the 
window

> manager.



I'm thinking of the other way around: think of windows as workspaces

and tabs as windows. Then if applications can "borrow" gnome-shell

features, they could show overview mode inside app windows. More

freedom for applications, less time to wait for a standardized spec.

And applications may be able to choose a better way to represent tabs,

instead of tab thumbnails.



By turning all tabs to windows and let the window manager manage them

all, there would be too many windows, too many tiny, lookalike

thumbnails in overview mode as you said, which does not help at all.

-- 

Duy

_______________________________________________

gnome-shell-list mailing list

[email protected]

http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-shell-list


_______________________________________________
gnome-shell-list mailing list
[email protected]
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-shell-list

Reply via email to