Hi Edward,

thank you for the explanations.

Am 02.10.2015 um 08:17 schrieb Edward Bartolo:
> Tilt wrote: " Does the button "New" take the user to a scan for
> available WiFi networks?"
>
> The button New displays a dialog box which has that functionality, but
> on demand by clicking a button. This avoid users having to wait for
> scanning for wifi signals when they know to which wifi source they
> want to connect.


I think the entire issue "how do i scan for available networks" is badly implemented in wicd *and* in Windows WiFi Connections (which are two WiFi connection assistants i know from practice).

In both user interfaces, it is never clear, what a user has to do to rebuild the list of available networks *now*:

wicd's button for doing that is labeled "Update" (update what?) and it if the wicd application windows is opened at default size. When scanning, wicd only offers a marginal user feedback that it currently is performing a scan: a static, light gray text "Searching" (searching what?) appears somewhere in the list of networks.

Windows 8 (modern UI) WiFi does not have a Scan-Now-button at all. I regularly have to jump through hoops to let it rebuild the list of available WiFi networks by disconnecting, restarting the WiFi network adapter and other such tricks. It offers no indication that it currently is scanning at all.

My personal opinion is, netman can offer a clearer implementation of both interactions:

* If a user wants to scan for available networks *now* there should be a clearly indicated function to do so.

* If the list of available networks is rebuilt *now*, a clear indication that says so should be given to the user.

Best regards,
Tilman
_______________________________________________
Dng mailing list
Dng@lists.dyne.org
https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng

Reply via email to