Andrew Watkins wrote: > Shawn Walker wrote: > >> On Thu, Mar 13, 2008 at 9:54 AM, Calum Benson <Calum.Benson at sun.com> >> wrote: >> >>> On Wed, 2008-03-12 at 13:08 -0400, Sebastien Roy wrote: >>> > I also don't see the point in cluttering panels with needless menus if >>> > they're already available through the "Launch" menu. >>> >>> I agree, but currently we don't have the 'Launch' menu on the panel in >>> Indiana... so we need to decide which to go with. (One advantage of the >>> Apps/Places/Systems menus is that broader and shallower menu systems >>> are, generally, easier to navigate than narrow and deep ones.) >>> >> I too was initially thrown off when I first saw the "shallow menus" in >> GNOME when I used Ubuntu. >> >> After I got used to it though, I loved it! >> >> I personally am in favour of keeping the Apps, Places, System menus as >> I think they are great for easy navigation. >> >> It's so much better than having one large menu and having to dig >> through it for commonly used things. >> >> > > I am still a big fan of the old JDS layout and with the one panel at the > bottom and one launch menu. I know it was there to look like Windows XP, > but it works. I know and the end of the day it does not matter since we > can change it to any which way, but I still believe that we should have > a slightly different look and feel than the standard GNOME interface. > > Andrew > _______________________________________________ > desktop-discuss mailing list > desktop-discuss at opensolaris.org > I like the current JDS layout, which is based on XP from a usability standpoint. Most of us are just used to Windows' layout, may it be from using Windows 95-Vista, the placement is the norm. While popularity is no reason to do anything, let alone change or keep it, I find the current layout more productive than taking up the whole screen with panels. Pixels are of value to the user, even on higher resolution monitors, especially for developers. Using up extra pixels is the devil's work, and I find it annoying to say the least when tons of icons scatter the launcher and panels with redundant links clutter the desktop experience.
James
