On Mon, 2006-04-03 at 11:36 -0400, George Reeke wrote:
> Dr. Mr. Smith and list,
>    Well, when I click on "Move", a list of my mail folders pops up.
> I scroll to the one I want, then click it and the selected mail
> moves there.  If it's the same as the one I used last time, it is
> already selected.  If I were to drag and drop, where would I drag to?
> There is no destination folder list.   It certainly would not be
> intuitive to use the "On This Computer" list at the left:

Depends on how intuitive you are, I guess!  :)

>                                                            I don't
> want to move to the destination folder, which is what happens if I
> click there.  Besides, even if that is what I am supposed to do,
> I don't feel very comfortable scrolling while dragging and maybe
> dropping the drag at the wrong place.  And don't I have to click
> on the scroll bar to scroll?  Or am I supposed to scroll until
> the destination folder is visible on the list, then drag there
> (moving the mouse back and forth twice instead of once).  That
> seems sort of backwards to me.  So, you see, the Move button is
> much more intuitive.

No.  With mouse-left still pressed and the cursor over the folder
list, just "drag down" (or up, as the case my be).  The folder
list will magically scroll down/up for you.

I'm not that intuitive either, I guess, since I only discovered 
it by accident. 

>    Anyway, I choose never to use drag and drop for anything.  This
> came from some bad experiences in that other operating system, when
> it was never clear whether drop meant move or meant copy.  I find
> it better never to use it at all than always to be unsure about this
> distinction.  Am I supposed to use Ctrl-click to copy or is it the
> other way around?  Maybe this has been standardized now, but I have
> habits that work for me.

That is a very valid point.

>    Paul, this is not directed at you personally (you just asked a
> question, which I tried to answer), but I would like to take this
> opportunity to say this:  I wish everybody would stop trying to
> tell everybody else how to use their computers.  Call me whatever you
> want, I believe this is a legitimate choice for me.  I am used to it,
> it works, it is simple, it doesn't hurt anything, so why should it
> arbitrarily be taken away?  Others are welcome to drag and drop if
> that works for them, I really don't care.  I also realize developers
> cannot add every gizmo that anybody ever asks for, but in this case
> we are talking about taking away a gizmo that has always been there.
> Presumably, it took some active work to remove it.
>    (BTW, I do know what the kleenex box does, I was being a little
> rhetorical in my original post, so please don't bother explaining
> it to me.)
>    Sincerely
>    George Reeke
> 
> 
> On Tue, 2006-03-28 at 11:40 -0500, Paul Smith wrote:
> > %% George Reeke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > 
> >   gr> One person's "not useful" is another person's "essential."  The
> >   gr> answer is to make the toolbar configurable, as I have requested in
> >   gr> an earlier posting and have filed on the official feature-request
> >   gr> list.  Developers: I hope you are listening.  I am one of those
> >   gr> who consider "Move" and "Copy" essential, but would gladly get rid
> >   gr> of those unlabelled buttons like the one that looks like a box of
> >   gr> Kleenex that does who-knows-what.
> > 
> > I don't disagree with what you're saying about configurability.
> > However, I am curious as to why drag-n-drop doesn't meet your needs,
> > such that a "Move" button is considered essential.
> > 
> > Cheers!
> > 
> 
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-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Ron Johnson, Jr.
Jefferson, LA USA

"Microsoft's success depends largely not on superior product, but
on understanding how the market works, and exploiting that
understanding without shame or morality. 'He who controls the
standards controls the marketr' It's THAT simple."
Ron Walker

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