On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 07:52:29PM +0200, Arnold Krille wrote: > [*] No, I don't have references at hand. I just look at the big projects with > their usability experts and their guide-lines. Which they create so that > developers like you and me don't have to worry about colors, knob-behavior, > widget movement and key shortcuts... A few comments: "Usability experts" in big projects are more often than not just market researchers. Which means that whatever they produce amounts to the desires of a population whose preferences are in most cases not the result of any rational process but of commercial manipulation combined with ignorance. And in any case what they turn up would be completely irrelevant in the context of any specialised application domain. I'll let audio engineers tell me how an audio app should look on screen, not any of those 'experts'. I've *never* seen any serious 'pro' audio application conforming to whatever desktop usability standards you may suggest. And the same goes for applications in the other domains I've worked in: space telecom and military (sonar and artillery management). As an example, the typical GUI toolkit slider is a *joke* for pro audio. It's just good enough to control the volume of a media player. One could expect it to be useful as well for e.g. controlling the gains of a soundcard, but even in that modest role it fails (see a recent thread about an improved envy24control). And even in less specialised domains trying to conform to such standards may just kill an application. My very first Linux install was Suse 8.1 IIRC. It had a nice Gnome app to monitor processes, called 'Gnome Process Monitor' or something similar. On the first update it disappeared, to be be replaced by something that looking like a browser and having completely irrelevant 'File' and 'Edit' menus. But *all* the useful functionality (such as the graphical representation of memory use) had been removed in the interest of 'conformity'. I've never used it since, plain 'top' is better. Ciao, -- FA There are three of them, and Alleline. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user