...@gmail.com
Date: Mon, 7 Nov 2011 19:54:09 -0300
To: isan...@gmail.com
CC: ayatana@lists.launchpad.net
Subject: Re: [Ayatana] Fwd: Serious issues
Last week I conducted a workshop on libre graphics tools in an
important meeting here in Argentina. The attendees were people who
don't use
.
--
From: gespert...@gmail.com
Date: Mon, 7 Nov 2011 19:54:09 -0300
To: isan...@gmail.com
CC: ayatana@lists.launchpad.net
Subject: Re: [Ayatana] Fwd: Serious issues
Last week I conducted a workshop on libre graphics tools in an
important meeting here
On 11/06/2011 10:11 PM, Remco wrote:
For your use case the always-visible setting is probably the best.
In graphics applications, the canvas area can never be large enough.
There tend to be panels and bars for the huge number of tools and
option, so there really is no space for a permanent
No. It comes down to meaning this group of users should set a different
unhide behavior than the default. You can it such that the launcher will
only unhide when you hit the corner, which is an acceptable solution for
this use case.
Ian Santopietro
Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint
On Mon, Nov 7, 2011 at 6:38 AM, Ian Santopietro isan...@gmail.com wrote:
No. It comes down to meaning this group of users should set a different
unhide behavior than the default. You can it such that the launcher will
only unhide when you hit the corner, which is an acceptable solution for
I was pointing out that this configuration is not suitable for every
user, the Inkscape users acting as a prime example. It is nearly
impossible to find a default configuration that will work well for
everybody, and the current default setup works best for a majority of
users. I'm not opposed
Last week I conducted a workshop on libre graphics tools in an
important meeting here in Argentina. The attendees were people who
don't use graphics programs regularly (and most of them don't use
gnu/linux at all).
We had Ubuntu 11.10 with Unity in the classroom's computers.
Unity proved to be a
On Mon 07 Nov 2011 03:54:09 PM MST, gespert...@gmail.com wrote:
Last week I conducted a workshop on libre graphics tools in an
important meeting here in Argentina. The attendees were people who
don't use graphics programs regularly (and most of them don't use
gnu/linux at all).
We had Ubuntu
: gespert...@gmail.com
Date: Mon, 7 Nov 2011 19:54:09 -0300
To: isan...@gmail.com
CC: ayatana@lists.launchpad.net
Subject: Re: [Ayatana] Fwd: Serious issues
Last week I conducted a workshop on libre graphics tools in an
important meeting here in Argentina. The attendees were people who
don't use
i use gimp fairly often and i've run into the focus problem... if one of
gimps windows that isn't the image window that normally had the app menu on
it is in focus then the gimp app menu won't show up. it acts as if the
only gimp window is the one that would normally hold the app menu.
luckily
On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 22:00, Josh Andler scis...@gmail.com wrote:
Ink scape! +10
As an inkscape developer who is bug testing all the time, I have to say that
as frustrating it is for me, I can't imagine how frustrating it is for users
trying to be productive (not that bug testing isn't being
On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 8:25 AM, Michael J Daniel
michael.j.dan...@comcast.net wrote:
**
What about moving everything on the screen to the right when the launcher
appears.
And move it back when the launcher goes away?
Sounds cool. better than accidental launches that stay on screen. however
Ink scape! +10
As an inkscape developer who is bug testing all the time, I have to say
that as frustrating it is for me, I can't imagine how frustrating it is for
users trying to be productive (not that bug testing isn't being
productive). I also hit this issue in GIMP and a handful of other
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