Adam Williamson <awilliam@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Tue, 2009-04-28 at 16:48 +0100, Naheem Zaffar wrote: > >> Forcing a choice at install time to uninformed users is plain bad >> usability. Allowing those that are informed to change the defaults is >> the right way. > > Naheem nailed this one. The problem with forcing a choice is that, for a > certain group of people, the choice is nonsense: they have no idea what > they are being asked to choose, or what they should choose. We could ask the Gnome project to describe in two sentences the differences between Gnome and KDE 4 and also ask KDE to do so. The result could be a hint for the user. The following is just some random bullshit, please don't take it seriously. I just want to demonstrate length and terminology of such a hint for the user (but probably even talking about frameworks and applets might be to high level): [screen- Gnome: A desktop environment that tries hard to enforce shot consistent, accessible and coherent user interfaces. By default default the list of running applications and the main menu desktop] items are split into two panels. [screen- KDE: A desktop environment that gives its users more shot possibilities to adapt the environment to specific needs. In default KDE 4, panels and desktop are just different instances of a desktop] common framework, allowing to move applets between panels and the desktop. -- Have you ever considered how much text can fit in eighty columns? Given that a signature typically contains up to four lines of text, this space allows you to attach a tremendous amount of valuable information to your messages. Seize the opportunity and don't waste your signature on bullshit that nobody cares about. -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list