On Mon, Aug 11, 2014 at 05:34:04PM +0200, Matthias Urlichs wrote: > You mean left vs. right side?
Or even showing them at all (certainly last time I bothered to look at gnome 3 it seemed to think buttons on windows were mostly to be avoided). > People who are so afraid of new stuff to learn that they won't even figure > out how to close a window are not Gnome's (or XFCE's, for that matter) > target audience. > If you want that, install KDE and tell it to use one of the > let's-mimic-Windows/MacOS themes. xfce is perfectly useable to most people by default. All I personally expect from a window manager is: Be able to launch programs (ideally using alt+F2) Be able to resize the window using the edge of the window Have a maximize/restore button Have a minimize button Have a close button (These last 3 should also show up when I hit alt+space, because well I have used that keystroke on many systems for over 20 years to do that). That's it. I don't need any more than that. Gnome 3 failed that out of the box. It seems Microsoft is willing to accept they fucked up on windwos 8 and are backing down and restoring what people really want in the next version. I wonder if the gnome UI designers will ever be willing to admit they screwed up and back down. Adding new idea is fine, but not at the expense of existing features and behaviour. You have to let people continue to use things until they get used to the new things if they ever do. You can't just force people to switch the way they work. -- Len Sorensen -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-gtk-gnome-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/20140811173528.gw17...@csclub.uwaterloo.ca