On Tue, 2005-06-21 at 13:43 -0400, David Zeuthen wrote: > I think that the way it works today we always want the icon available. > Otherwise, how would I go about turning of the radio of my wireless card > (just before boarding a flight) if there is nowhere to click? > > Of course, for the rare cases like when there is no possible network > connection (e.g. only wired card and there is no link) we *could* hide > the icon but I doubt this is worth the effort..
At least skype and gaim use notification icons which are never hidden, except when not used at all. I am not sure about this, since I only use GNOME, but isn't it true that nm-applet as a notification icon also works on KDE (and possibly other systems implementing this freedesktop.org standard)? Are GNOME panel applets compatible with KDE now days? Further more, I am a bit worried about the whole menu idea. It already gets pretty big if you use your computer in a busy neighborhood. Add extensions for other network types, like ppp, isdn, gprs, umts, bluetooth, ... together with configuration, it will become huge, and definitely not "stetic" (think scrollbar in the menu). All other notification icons I currently have (7 to be precise), show some kind of dialog box / application window when left clicked, and they offer a menu when right clicked. Regular applets are not that different, except they either perform immediate action or show some kind of information on left click. Finally, the configuration, if any, should really be done by the separate capplet, or a dialog started from the right click menu. Just my 2 cents. -- Tomislav Vujec Manager, Client Development Red Hat Otto-Hahn-Straße 20 85609 München-Dornach Tel +49 89 205071 212 Fax +49 89 205071 111 Cell. +49 172 623 1214 _______________________________________________ NetworkManager-list mailing list NetworkManager-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list