Orcan Ogetbil (oget.fedora@xxxxxxxxx) said: > What I am trying to say is, a redesign of an interface _usually_ have > valid reasons. Those users who don't want their menu items moving > around want to live like automated machines. Forbidding such changes > promotes lazyness. > > If the update removes features that existed in previous version, that > is another story. I support you forbidding this type of change. > > But I really don't buy this "users shouldn't be disturbed by moving a > button from left to right". If the user is disrupted to what they are > used to, he needs to learn not to (be disrupted). Do we really want to > serve a closed-for-learning community? :( It's restricting the arbitrary application of change to the user to times when they are well able to deal with it. If I'm running F-13 and trying to create a slide deck, and run into a crash, I want the update for the crash to just fix that crash. Not fix that crash and reorganize the slide interface so I need to relearn it for the slides I'm in the middle of. If this change is restricted to the next major release, I'm expecting some amount of change, and therefore are better able to process it, we're better able to document it, and so on. Taking your suggestion to its extreme, we should promote learning and resist automaton behavior by randomizing the menus at each click, changing the default MTA once per release, and so on. Bill -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel