> >
>
> To be clear, the underlying image was created by Paulo José. Working
> on smaller screens is a good question, but you have to get something
> before you make it work with additional constraints. LibreOffice has
> two challenges, looking good on the upcoming high-res screens, and
> working okay on the smaller screens. I think as a start, the focus
> should be on >~1280 pixels wide screens.
>
>
Really not trying to be pessimistic but in all truth, I don't see this
happening. I've seen the work before and personally I like it quite a bit
but you have three major issues:

1. Lack of any kind of consensus, without UX input it's kind of DOA. Doing
a ton of work and then showing it to them seems worse than working with
them and getting their feedback as you plan. There may have already been
extensive talk about this already within UX, a quick email over there might
result in a huge savings of time on your part.

2. Lack of developers to implement -- if you look on FDO you can see a
massive list of bugs that are being worked on and awaiting work. Having a
developer spend months implementing this is unlikely as they focus on more
pressing issues

3. Lack of funds to pay someone else - for this you're really probably
talking about $10's of thousands of dollars.


Just my two cents, feel free to take it or leave it.


Best,
Joel

-- 
*Joel Madero*
LibreOffice QA Volunteer
jmadero....@gmail.com

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