@Nathan: No. Definitely not.

The main and major mistake of unity, which your proposal does not solve,
is to force the user into a particular desktop and working style without
leaving any options, without allowing to configure to your local needs
and taste. Unfortunately, this enforced style does not meet most
people's requirements. The odd thing is that unity tries to be a poor
man's MacOS, which is really a bad idea. Whoever wants to use a Mac will
buy a Mac, and not use a lame copy.

E.g. I've installed a new machine this week with oneiric and again tried
to work with unity. Unity is broken through bad design and poor
ergonomics. E.g. that MacOS-like style to move all Menus from the
program's window to the top bar is usefull in full screen mode, but
otherwise highly annoying and confusing, because it moves menues far
away from the active program. Even worse, that ugly window style makes
it difficult to see which window is currently active. Plenty of times I
accidently used the menues of the wrong program (i.e. other program than
intended). And it makes usage slow and counter-intuitive, because menues
are too far away. (And this is not necessarily good just because Apple
does it that way.)

In other words: The Annoyance of unity is not just limited to that
launcher bar stealing mouse events. It's the whole idea that's odd. The
idea of forcing people to use a user interface build after the personal
flavour of some ubuntu designers, but loaded with flaws. You need to
make it configurable. Make every single design element of unity (i.e.
every detail where it differs from earlier ubuntu desktops that were
really good) configurable. Allow users to turn it off if they don't like
it.

This means: A poor launcher bar does not get any better if you move it
to a different position or give it a different shape or timing. You need
to provide users an option to work completely without that damned
launcher bar at all. Because some like it, but others hate it. This
thing is really bad designed and a major reason for not using unity. On
one computer I'm using Gnome3, on the other XFCE, just because unity is
a continuous annoyance, confusing, overloaded with automatisms and
animations, and in my eyes designed for children, not for working
people. Even after several months of trying to do so I cannot really
work with unity. It's a horrible interface.

When installing a new net top computer this week, I used an old 2,5 inch
hard disk which I had replaced in a notebook computer about 3 years ago
and never touched it again since then. I found an old ubuntu on it,
which still booted into it's regular desktop. This old gnome2 desktop
was wonderful. Fast, intuitive, no problems at all. Doing it's job and
not disturbing the user. (And nice brown colors compared to that ugly
ones of today.) I hate to say, but ubuntu's desktop has significantly
degraded and become worse since that. 2-3 years ago i was working with
the desktop. Today I have to work against the desktop.

Linus Thorvalds described it absolutely correctly: Gnome2 was much
better then XFCE is. But XFCE is still better than Unity and Gnome3 are
today.


@Pako: Not correct. I also own an iPad, an iPod and an Android phone.
Don't ever compare that with a desktop machine. Don't expect oranges to
have the same skin as apples.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/765819

Title:
  Launcher - Make Launcher left of screen reveal more responsive and
  less prone to false positives

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