https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=414670
Bug ID: 414670 Summary: Make connecting to arbitrary servers more obvious and user-friendly, like in Nautilus Product: dolphin Version: unspecified Platform: Other OS: Linux Status: REPORTED Severity: wishlist Priority: NOR Component: general Assignee: dolphin-bugs-n...@kde.org Reporter: n...@kde.org CC: kfm-de...@kde.org Target Milestone: --- I found myself using Nautilus today and quite liked a feature of theirs: Nautilus makes it really easy to figure out how to connect to a network location. On the "Other locations" page, there's a big, obvious "Connect to server" label with a text field that prompts you to enter a network location URL, and it remembers recently-connected servers. See attached screenshot. Of course Dolphin has a URL bar that you can just paste arbitrary URLs into, but this is an inferior UI for several reasons: - It starts out in breadcrumb mode; many users may not ever discover that it has a URL entry mode - Even in URL entry mode, it's not obvious that it accepts arbitrary URLs to network locations we well. You might think that it only shows local paths. - It doesn't remember recent network locations (Bug 174810). In addition to this UI, Dolphin has an "Add network folder" wizard accessible from the remote:/ ioslave. It is also sub-optimal because it's in the form of a wizard that asks you lots of questions you might not know the answer to. Also, the whole point of it is to create a semi-permanent link to some network place, not a transient connection to a server that you might not necessarily connect to again. Overall I found Nautilus's approach to be quite user-friendly and I think we could learn something from it. Perhaps we could add a toolbar visible in the remote:/ ioslave that displays this feature in it, like we do for the trash:/ ioslave that displays a custom UI to help you empty the trash: https://cgit.kde.org/dolphin.git/commit/?id=eb68fae15cdbf15e894d1a9d555c88d306261cc2 -- You are receiving this mail because: You are watching all bug changes.