Hi Vincenzo,
You might have more luck if you describe your changes as feature
requests. Whether or not you personally think they're bugs, calling
them new features should avoid the "always been that way" reaction from
developers.
You might also want to try helping out with the "improved me to
> Let me suggest that Ubuntu appoint an usability triager/ombudsman,
> to determine (from the Ubuntu users' perspective, not from an Ubuntu
> developers' perspective) how much attention ought to be paid to each
> and every usability-related bug report.
My 2c: I have to whole-heartedly agree. Proba
+1, me too, etc...
See the comments in bug 294523 at
https://bugs.launchpad.net/hundredpapercuts/+bug/294523
A few users have tried to report/push/discuss for this for a few releases
already but it seems the bug is low priority even though its a usability
pain and that too right at the start of t
Il 22/07/2009 22:53, Mikus Grinbergs ha scritto:
> Let me suggest that Ubuntu appoint an usability triager/ombudsman,
> to determine (from the Ubuntu users' perspective, not from an Ubuntu
> developers' perspective) how much attention ought to be paid to each
> and every usability-related bug repor
>> However, it is very easy that a developer does not recognise an
>> usability-related bug report, and confuses it with a more or less
>> strange support request, and I often have to discuss to have it
>> accepted as a bug.
>
> The issue is that Ubuntu doesn't write most of the softwares it
> dis
On mer., 2009-07-22 at 18:47 +0200, Vincenzo Ciancia wrote:
> However, it is very easy that a developer does not recognise an
> usability-related bug report, and confuses it with a more or less
> strange support request, and I often have to discuss to have it
> accepted
> as a bug.
The issue i
Il 22/07/2009 19:04, Henrique Almeida ha scritto:
> Agreed. Ubuntu developers either don't understand my usability
> reports or tag them as low priority bugs, which gets triaged for many
> releases.
This is because these are not crashers and typically just affect a small
portion of the applicat
Agreed. Ubuntu developers either don't understand my usability
reports or tag them as low priority bugs, which gets triaged for many
releases. Once I have submitted a bug report on an usability issue
that caused "information loss", which is serious. In certain PDF
files, I can't search for accente
Il 22/07/2009 18:47, Vincenzo Ciancia ha scritto:
> Dear all,
>
> sorry for crossposting, please notice it before replying to all.
>
I am possibly a bit of an idiot for what I did, but luckily the other
list which has nothing to do with my target has a moderator.
I generate too much noise. My ap
Dear all,
sorry for crossposting, please notice it before replying to all.
I tend to report all usability bugs I find, in the hope that ubuntu will
become better. The hudred-papercut effort shows that I am not wrong in
reporting those as bugs.
However, it is very easy that a developer does not
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