Perhaps an alternative way to hide windows is to have a dedicated "shelf"
workspace for windows to be placed for later use. Rather than a minimize
button, there could be a little shelf icon button on the window's title bar.
_______________________________________________________
|[shelf] [x]|
|_______________________________________________________|
When you hit the shelf button, the window would be transferred from the current
workspace to the shelf workspace, which would be visible from the Activities
overlay view. (You might want to give the shelf workspace a different
background, like a wooden bookshelf picture, to differentiate it from the other
workspaces.)
In addition, you might want to offer a visible shortcut for users to quickly
get back a window placed in the shelf workspace. A shelf icon button on the
panel next to the Activities button could bring up an overlay view of the shelf
workspace only, and the user could bring back one or more shelved windows to
the current workspace just by clicking on the windows in the shelf overlay view.
Panel:
_________________________________________________________
[Activities][shelf][current app menu]
_________________________________________________________
To help the user track where the window went, the window could animate to the
shelf button before disappearing from the screen.
The user could also get the shelved window by clicking on the Activities button
and moving a shelved window from the self workspace to one of the other
workspaces.
This way, we would still be working within the workspace paradigm, but users
would have a quicker way to hide and unhide their windows than just using the
Activities view.
Thanks for reading.
~~~~~~~~~
dissertus scribendo latine videri volo.
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