just a joke: should the new file manager look like more dolphin than nautilus? ;) supernova
Il giorno giovedì 10 maggio 2012, Ryan Gauger ha scritto: > Actually, I think if Nautilus was updated and was a lot more advanced than > it is now (if this is a GNOME application, we can't do anything). If it was > updated as I stated, i would be happy for it to stay. IMHO, Dolphin would > suit Ubuntu, but it's too bad it's a KDE app. Thanks! > > In Christ, > Ryan > > On May 9, 2012, at 6:24 PM, nick rundy <nru...@hotmail.com<javascript:_e({}, > 'cvml', 'nru...@hotmail.com');>> > wrote: > > I agree, Nautilus should go. Frankly, I'd like to see Nautilus go solely > for the fact that this bug still exists: > https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=552093 > > It's only logical to assume that GNOME is abandoning Nautilus--why else > would they devote resources to those stupid "single purpose applications" > when Nautilus is so plagued with bugs and needs much improvement? > > The other thing that makes Nautilus unusable is the fact that it doesn't > display content of mp3 tags when in details view. When I'm > managing/deleting things that have mp3 tags (like podcasts), the inability > to read the mp3 tags in Details view makes Nautilus incapable of > effectively managing a digital walkman or ipod. I'm always forced back to > the Windows-Explorer file-browser when I need to deal with ipod, walkman > etc. > > So hopefully a new file-browser will fix Nautilus-bug-552093 and display > mp3 tags in Details view but keeps all of Nautilus' strengths. Some have > complained about looks, but I think Nautilus looks good in 12.04. Best it's > ever looked IMHO. > > > > ------------------------------ > Date: Sat, 5 May 2012 17:32:39 -0500 > From: gregory.merc...@gmail.com > To: unity-design@lists.launchpad.net > Subject: [Unity-design] Replacing Nautilus > > Hi, > > I've been reading this list for a while, but only joined recently because > I somehow missed that subscription was open. I wish I'd joined earlier, > because there were times I wanted to offer solutions. I'll have to start by > offering a problem. > > Nautilus has been becoming less useful with each release. One of the most > recent offenses to all taste and sensibility was the removal of the > background setting options for folders. I believe emblem settings were > removed at the same time with the unfortunate side effect of my temporarily > emblem-marked folders becoming permanently so. > > Nautilus was never really complete. It's never had a Miller column mode. > Its spatial mode didn't have the toolkit or window manager support to work > properly: missing were at least proper focus handling and something like > _NET_WM_URL for a title bar path menu. The file property panels were in > many cases anemic. While emblems allowed some distinction, a tweak to the > icon color would have allowed distinctions that carried over into the modes > with smaller icons. The views for collections were never well developed and > seem to have been dropped altogether. Probably a hundred other things that > could have been done were not done. It seems headed to becoming one of the > worst file selection dialogs I've ever seen; I expect a "Close" button in > the bottom right corner any day now. > > Mainstream GNOME has all but abandoned Nautilus in favor of single-purpose > applications. That could be just an implementation detail, but I don't > think I've seen the kind of cohesion that you'd get from a good workplace > shell, like Nautilus could have been. Unity development seems to be > proceeding on the premise that a file manager is not needed. While files > and folders may not be the best way for me to organize my work, I really > can't afford to hire a design and programming team to create the special > purpose applications I need. I'll have to settle for the UNIX philosophy of > using good single-purpose tools together to "roll my own" applications, but > the available desktop environments don't seem to support that. GNUstep > probably does, but there's too big of a "get it working right" curve for > me. KDE might, but I can't use it for very long without getting dizzy and > nauseated from all the roll-over effects. XFCE seems to have broken Gtk+ to > achieve a look-and-feel on par with Xaw3d; maybe I just tried a buggy > release? GNOME's single-purpose applications are not the same thing as > single-purpose tools. And, really, only Unity has gotten rid of all the > extra menu bars and put the one in the place where it belongs. > > As I see it, there's a need for Unity to have it's own file manager. I > haven't seen any designs for this, at least none I liked enough to > remember. Is anyone else giving this any thought? What's going to replace > Nautilus? > > Needing at least a proper folder system, > Greg > > > -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~unity-design Post to : > unity-design@lists.launchpad.net Unsubs > >
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