Owen Taylor wrote:
On Fri, 2004-07-16 at 19:20, Mike Fedyk wrote:
Brent Fox wrote:
But it's nice to have one window with all of the "panels" available for double clicking on. It's a pain to have to go through the menu to get to each pref panel especially on low resolution.I propose that we remove the "Start Here" icon from the default desktop for the following reasons:
- It presents the same choices that the Main Menu does, just in a different way. This is potentially confusing and inconsistent. The Menu is a much faster way to launch apps anyway.
Just to give some historical background, when we introduced Start Here
in Red Hat 8 or so, our goal, or at least, my goal, was to deemphasize
and hopefully eventually get rid of the big panel menu.
Thanks Owen,
For apps there are basically three things the user might want to do:
- Start an app they are
already familiar with. Finding an item two levels
deep in a big menu is an awful way to do this. You want to encourage,
even force the user to make a favorites menu entry for it.
Encourage yes. Force, no.
A MRU and MFU application list in the red hat/start menu seems like a good solution.
- Start an app that they don't know about yet to accomplish a particular task. The panel menu is an awful way of searching forYep, but most people have been trained to do that, and concepts like "search" don't really seem to penetrate into their psyche. :-/
an app to do a particular task.
- Browse through the apps on the system seeing what cool thingsTrue. Why not have both? Windows did this by using base concepts of directories and shortcuts. And it allows the user to modify their menu layout with base tools. Very unix like don't you think?
they can do. The panel menu is an awful way of browsing apps on the system.
I'd much rather see a menu used only as a short list of favoriteWell, where is this app browser you mention? If that's the intention of "start here" then it's really missing the desired functionality...
applications and common actions like "logout" and have a real app
browser for everything else.
But I've never been very successful at pushing this point of view...
Maybe with some work it can get somewhere.
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