On Sat, 2009-05-09 at 22:19 +0300, Natan Yellin wrote:
> Mike is sitting at his computer and working in Inkscape when several
> emails arrive. In the past, Mike has clicked on the indicator icon to
> get rid of the dot but has always ignored the messages themselves.
> Therefore, the emails are ass
On Sat, 2009-05-09 at 10:43 -0700, Jordan Mantha wrote:
> So in the end for me, user-to-user messaging was just fine for me
> before the indicator applet and so I've removed it, but system-to-user
> messaging could *definitely* use an indicator applet.
I'll avoid making jokes about how you want to
On Sun, 10 May 2009 16:14:25 -0500 Ted Gould wrote:
>On Sat, 2009-05-09 at 22:19 +0300, Natan Yellin wrote:
>
>> Mike is sitting at his computer and working in Inkscape when several
>> emails arrive. In the past, Mike has clicked on the indicator icon to
>> get rid of the dot but has always ignore
On Sun, May 10, 2009 at 05:24:32PM -0400, Scott Kitterman wrote:
> I don't use notifications for mail because I get far to much of it. I have
> lots of rules I've built into my chosen mail client (Kmail). I might be
> interested in rules to get notified if mail lands in a certain folder (it
>
Hey all,
I'm not sure who is keeping up with the trunk on Indicator applet. The
big things going in now are more tests and some documentation. But,
that means a new dependency. To build the tests you'll need a simple
little tool that I built called dbus-test-runner. Basically all it does
is ru
On Sun, 10 May 2009 16:17:56 -0500 Ted Gould wrote:
>On Sat, 2009-05-09 at 10:43 -0700, Jordan Mantha wrote:
>> So in the end for me, user-to-user messaging was just fine for me
>> before the indicator applet and so I've removed it, but system-to-user
>> messaging could *definitely* use an indicat
On Sun, May 10, 2009 at 5:37 PM, Scott Kitterman wrote:
> When I looked through the stuff on my systray
> and thought, "what do I really not want there/wouldn't mind if it were one
> level of indirection away" and it was all system related.
>
I don't think this is true for most users though; I fo
> I think this is where the greatest potential for saving systray space comes
> from. I'm working on a blog post on this (since it's hard to point at
> pictures on a mailing list). When I looked through the stuff on my systray
> and thought, "what do I really not want there/wouldn't mind if it
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Dylan McCall wrote:
>> I think this is where the greatest potential for saving systray space comes
>> from. I'm working on a blog post on this (since it's hard to point at
>> pictures on a mailing list). When I looked through the stuff on my systra
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