Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread Alan Pope
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On 25/03/12 10:48, scoundrel50a wrote:
> I am glad that he has been helpful to you, but this thread has
> shown a different side, one that says, if you dont like it go
> elsewhere, is that helpful, that is effectively telling people he
> has no time for them, that isnt consistent.if he keeps saying
> that people will start going elsewhere..is that what you really
> want?
> 

It's less "if you dont like it go elsewhere" and more "if all you're
going to do is bitch and not actually do anything constructive then we
probably won't mourn your disappearance".

We already get an awful lot of feedback about Unity, Ubuntu and all
the bits and pieces around it. I'm not saying we don't need more
feedback, just that the feedback needs to be targeted to the right
place, at the right time and in the right language.

For example.

A mail to the Ubuntu-UK mailing list saying "Unity sucks, I'm
switching to Mint" isn't even remotely useful to anyone at all.

A mail to the Unity-design list saying "I've noticed that the icons
react in a way that doesn't match the design" or "I've installed
Ubuntu for a number of users and they've all commented on how hard it
is to access their devices, I suggest the following changes" perhaps
with a picture to explain how it can be improved, is likely to be more
useful.

Making Ubuntu better requires work on all sides, firing hate messages
into the sky doesn't work at all.

Cheers,
- -- 
Alan Pope
Engineering Manager

Canonical - Product Strategy
+44 (0) 7973 620 164
alan.p...@canonical.com
http://ubuntu.com/
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread Avi Greenbury
Liam Proven wrote:

> Unity is getting quite mature now. None of what I'm proposing is new
> code - this is all either restoring features that were one present, or
> things that have been accomplished by hacks, config tweaks and so on.
> It's all doable. But it's not getting any more configurable - in fact,
> options are /disappearing./ This is a very serious error of judgement,
> I think.

I do maintain that Gnome3 is what happened when the Gnome developers
decided that Gnome 2 was too configurable by half, which wasn't long
after everyone else decided it was nicely customisable.

In more seriousness, I think Unity's likely to go down the route of
Gnome 3, where the customisability and features that people want and
expect are provided by extensions and plugins[0] rather than the core
product itself. That frees up the Unity developers to focus completely
on the functionality that Canonical regard as important and means that
they don't need to support other people's daft ideas, and gets the DE
back towards the modular approach that's so invaluable for the rest of
the OS. 

This does, of course, completely break the assumption that every
Unity/Gnome3 install is roughly the same (which, apparently, is one of
the plus sides of making it hard to customise), but I suspect that in
environments where that's desirable it's trivial to simply prevent the
installation of these extensions to force people to maintain a normal
UI.

-- 
Avi

[0] I have no idea about Unity's architecture here, though I've heard
mention of plugins and add-ons for it.

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread alan c
On 25/03/12 11:11, scoundrel50a wrote:
>  its taking me forever to get 
> used to Ubuntu, trying another distro isnt going to workplus, from 
> what I can see, a lot of you are members of other distros too.this 
> distro is enough

(I do wish you well with the health problems)

I find that Lubuntu is pretty comfortable, and IIRC it is possible to
install a ppa offering gnome desktop, or at least it gave pretty
familiar menus etc. All of these and maybe more, can be installed as
desktop sessions, into Ubuntu, and chosen at logon.

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread alan c
On 24/03/12 01:38, Liam Proven wrote:
> However, I do think that Unity in general is not /nearly/ as
> customisable as Linux users tend to be used to.

I would expect more customisable options as time goes on. I have read
a statement which said that it was not policy to lack customise
options, but first things first.
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread alan c
On 23/03/12 22:23, Daniel Case wrote:
> I've been in the Ubuntu community for 5 years already and don't plan
> on leaving any time soon, but I think there needs to be some
> representation of the hacker culture that Ubuntu has built up over the
> years so that we can find the middle ground, it seems to me as though
> Canonical wants to believe that we are not here!

I think that there has been emotional hurt and upset which may have
been difficult but not impossible to avoid. I trust that ubuntu will
weather this with time, but I would have liked to have seen a
situation when a very senior Canonical marketing resource would have
handled some of the inevitable community pain a bit more elegantly.
Although it would be somewhat unprecedented in a normal business
environment.  But like a racing car, the direction can be changed in
an instant. I trust Ubuntu will win!
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread Alan Bell

On 23/03/12 21:06, Daniel Case wrote:
I'm not saying don't evolve, just evolve in a way that most users 
agree is a good idea,
so how do we define what most users want? Perhaps by doing rather a lot 
of user testing

http://davidplanella.wordpress.com/2011/08/02/looking-for-testers-in-london/
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel/2011-April/032988.html
http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2011/11/user-testing-of-unity-reveals-some-surprising-results/

this does of course lead to certain problems when they don't give the 
users time to sober up first

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ayatana-design/+bug/764905

but in the main it seems a reasonable approach.


I thought that was the aim of Linux?

not really, Linux is just the kernel.
Who's driving the development course here? The users or canonical? 
the contributors to the project, which is mostly but not exclusively 
Canonical. Why would you think that the users drive the development course?


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread alan c
On 25/03/12 11:08, Alan Bell wrote:
> little stopping you from actually dragging it in the direction you want 
> to go. Really. Participate remotely online in the developer summit that 

Oh I perhaps should mention. I had an idea for a minor improvement (I
think 'significant'  ) in how Launcher icons react. I raised a
bug, also contacted the lead developer on the desktop, and before long
the bug was accepted. Will be in a very very long queue though, but I
can say with certainty that Unity is open  to change.
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread alan c
On 25/03/12 10:48, scoundrel50a wrote:
> On 25/03/2012 10:18, alan c wrote:
>> On 23/03/12 22:11, scoundrel50a wrote:
>>> On 23/03/2012 22:04, Alan Pope wrote:
>>> On 23/03/12 21:45, Daniel Case wrote:
>> On 23 March 2012 21:21, Neil Greenwood
>>wrote:
>>> They spent lots of money testing different behaviours
>> In my opinion, this is where the problem lies. The main people
>> Linux attracts, no matter which way you look at it, are hackers (in
>> the general sense).
>>> That's exactly the problem we're trying to solve. Not asking the
>>> target audience, but only asking hackers would be arrogant and
>>> foolhardy. That's why we don't do that. We do listen to feedback, more
>>> than you'd imagine, and decisions taken about design (for example) are
>>> directly affected by user feedback. That doesn't happen for every
>>> minute decision, but it happens.
>>>
>>> We're also making it easier to buy computers with Ubuntu pre-installed
>>> by talking to hardware vendors, to get it shipped from the factory.
>>> It's hard work and takes a long time to do but we're getting there.
>>>
>> Which brings me back to my first point, who's going to advocate
>> Ubuntu if it annoys the hacker and makes life more difficult?
>>
>>> Those of us who do like it, do use it and believe it is the right path
>>> for Ubuntu to take. If you don't then you have a number of options:-
>>>
>>> * Install a different desktop environment on your Ubuntu system
>>> * Join the discussion on the various Ubuntu development lists to
>>> articulate how we're doing things wrong
>>> * Test and file bugs when things don't work correctly
>>> * Provide patches or programs to help Ubuntu&   Unity to appeal
>>>
>>> Personally I am in this for the long haul. Each 6 monthly release is
>>> fantastic, but I'm thinking years away from now, and I'm happy to
>>> persevere through the rough times because I think the long term goal
>>> is worth it.
>>>
>>> Frankly if people who are "inside" our community, "hackers" as you
>>> call them aren't willing to get stuck in then Linux Mint, Debian,
>>> Fedora and hundreds of other distros are ->   that way. Enjoy!
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>> oooh and who took your dummy away...that was my reaction when I read
>>> that...but the thing is, you work for Canonical, so your going to
>>> say that, whatever happenswhat is frustrating is people on here
>>> are giving an opinion and its being thrown aside is if it doesnt matter
>>> because you have all this research into what people like, but people are
>>> here telling you different, that has been going on since 11.04 people
>>> have said they dont like it..and its not getting better its getting
>>> worse.
>> I think that is an unfair response. Alan has personally given me
>> unbelievable support over many years  for my activities as a volunteer
>> advocate of FLOSS and Ubuntu.
>> What he says is sensible and quite proper, and I am delighted that he
>> has the courage to post on this group.
> I am glad that he has been helpful to you, but this thread has shown a 
> different side, one that says, if you dont like it go elsewhere, is that 
> helpful, that is effectively telling people he has no time for them, 
> that isnt consistent.if he keeps saying that people will start going 
> elsewhere..is that what you really want?

On the contrary. I went up to a counter in a (french) market and asked
for a cup of tea. I was treated politely, however they explained  they
 were a restaurant  counter only and  did not serve drinks, however
they were careful to direct me to a nearby counter which was a bar,
and served exactly what wanted. the same happened when I  went into a
shop wantnig a bottle of milk. I got directed to another shop 400
meters away, and did manage to get what I wanted.

It is, surely, quite appropriate to be directed to a place to get what
you say you want?
Anything else would be unhelpful.
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread scoundrel50a

On 23/03/2012 22:44, Alan Pope wrote:

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On 23/03/12 22:11, scoundrel50a wrote:

oooh and who took your dummy away...

Actually my patience is somewhat thin today because we cremated my
best friends Mum. Perhaps that has a bearing on my response, but it
puts things in perspective. Life is short.

Sorry if it seems that I'm being more harsh than usual. I'm just
pretty tired of people bitching about Ubuntu and Unity and doing
nothing about it but sending rants to people who can't actually fix
the problem.

We have developer lists and IRC channels for a reason, use them.


that was my reaction when I read that...but the thing is, you
work for Canonical, so your going to say that, whatever
happens

That's pretty insulting to me. Well done.


what is frustrating is people on here are giving an opinion

"Opinions are like, everyone has one".


and its being thrown aside is if it doesnt matter because you have
all this research into what people like, but people are here
telling you different, that has been going on since 11.04 people
have said they dont like it..and its not getting better its
getting worse.


Other distros are available.

Cheers,
- -- 
Alan Pope


I wasnt going to say this, but I will anyway, havent had a very good 
couple of weeks either, apart from the life threatening disease I have 
that am being kept alive by toxic drugs that I have to take every day, I 
can barely walk, because I have chronic condition called plantar 
fasciitis that causes me pain from my toes to my knees which even with 
treatment its not going, I also have a condition that is called 
arthropathy, that also causes me pain, and to top it off this week I 
found out I have another degenerative condition which is neuropathy, 
which is the nerves dying in my feet, which is most likely caused from 
the toxic drugs I have to take every day that keep me alive.so 
you'll have to excuse me if `I am 'cranky' too...plus the fact to be 
told go somewhere else, is not an option, its taking me forever to get 
used to Ubuntu, trying another distro isnt going to workplus, from 
what I can see, a lot of you are members of other distros too.this 
distro is enough


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread Alan Bell

On 25/03/12 10:48, scoundrel50a wrote:
I am glad that he has been helpful to you, but this thread has shown a 
different side, one that says, if you dont like it go elsewhere, is 
that helpful, that is effectively telling people he has no time for 
them, that isnt consistent.if he keeps saying that people will 
start going elsewhere..is that what you really want?


as long as people keep using and contributing to Free Software it is all 
good. If you want Ubuntu to go in a particular direction there is very 
little stopping you from actually dragging it in the direction you want 
to go. Really. Participate remotely online in the developer summit that 
is coming up in May, get involved in the various project mailing lists 
and IRC channels, attend the meetings of the teams that are making the 
decisions in these things etc. If some other distribution happens to be 
going the way you want to go then by all means tag along with that. At 
the last UDS I think Mark made the point that the opinions of those who 
contribute to the project are valued a lot more than the opinions of 
people who just use Ubuntu and have an opinion. Unity is quite 
extendable in different ways and the documentation on it is improving 
all the time, you can read all about it here:

http://developer.ubuntu.com/
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Unity

if you want to do interesting things and influence the direction then 
you can. If you are just along for the ride, relax and enjoy it.


Alan.

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread scoundrel50a

On 25/03/2012 10:18, alan c wrote:

On 23/03/12 22:11, scoundrel50a wrote:

On 23/03/2012 22:04, Alan Pope wrote:
On 23/03/12 21:45, Daniel Case wrote:

On 23 March 2012 21:21, Neil Greenwood
   wrote:

They spent lots of money testing different behaviours

In my opinion, this is where the problem lies. The main people
Linux attracts, no matter which way you look at it, are hackers (in
the general sense).

That's exactly the problem we're trying to solve. Not asking the
target audience, but only asking hackers would be arrogant and
foolhardy. That's why we don't do that. We do listen to feedback, more
than you'd imagine, and decisions taken about design (for example) are
directly affected by user feedback. That doesn't happen for every
minute decision, but it happens.

We're also making it easier to buy computers with Ubuntu pre-installed
by talking to hardware vendors, to get it shipped from the factory.
It's hard work and takes a long time to do but we're getting there.


Which brings me back to my first point, who's going to advocate
Ubuntu if it annoys the hacker and makes life more difficult?


Those of us who do like it, do use it and believe it is the right path
for Ubuntu to take. If you don't then you have a number of options:-

* Install a different desktop environment on your Ubuntu system
* Join the discussion on the various Ubuntu development lists to
articulate how we're doing things wrong
* Test and file bugs when things don't work correctly
* Provide patches or programs to help Ubuntu&   Unity to appeal

Personally I am in this for the long haul. Each 6 monthly release is
fantastic, but I'm thinking years away from now, and I'm happy to
persevere through the rough times because I think the long term goal
is worth it.

Frankly if people who are "inside" our community, "hackers" as you
call them aren't willing to get stuck in then Linux Mint, Debian,
Fedora and hundreds of other distros are ->   that way. Enjoy!

Cheers,
oooh and who took your dummy away...that was my reaction when I read
that...but the thing is, you work for Canonical, so your going to
say that, whatever happenswhat is frustrating is people on here
are giving an opinion and its being thrown aside is if it doesnt matter
because you have all this research into what people like, but people are
here telling you different, that has been going on since 11.04 people
have said they dont like it..and its not getting better its getting
worse.

I think that is an unfair response. Alan has personally given me
unbelievable support over many years  for my activities as a volunteer
advocate of FLOSS and Ubuntu.
What he says is sensible and quite proper, and I am delighted that he
has the courage to post on this group.
I am glad that he has been helpful to you, but this thread has shown a 
different side, one that says, if you dont like it go elsewhere, is that 
helpful, that is effectively telling people he has no time for them, 
that isnt consistent.if he keeps saying that people will start going 
elsewhere..is that what you really want?




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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread alan c
On 23/03/12 22:51, scoundrel50a wrote:
> .I never once since 11.04 have seen anything about testing, 
> being involved, but I see people on here and have had to ask myself, and 
> there is a tendency to either ignore or react the way you have, and you 
> wonder why people get angry...first I have heard of the testing done 
> in this threadwould have been nice to be involved in that...

Mark Shuttleworth has a regular and amazingly detailed blog, he also
has IRC sessions for Q & A, I  attended at least one. The governance
of Ubuntu is amazingly open and on record. There is a real lot of
stuff open and online, including a lot of videos of interviews and
conferences. I should say I think Mark S is a far sighted genius. The
one thing that you do not get with Ubuntu or Canonical is bullsh*t and
spin. In today's world this can be hard to accept. If information was
being looked for then there is a *lot* of raw information available,
but no marketing spin.

People got angry because they got hurt. There was plenty of
explanation available, and very detailed it was too, and some long
discussions on lists, some painful. However, afaik Canonical was not
contrite about the changes, and I think that a 'Sorry, we really *do*
have to go this way' would have helped. The lack of a 'sorry' is
something I noticed, and is a bit surprising because it would not cost
anything. But I guess that is what happens when there is no 'spin'.
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread alan c
On 23/03/12 22:11, scoundrel50a wrote:
> On 23/03/2012 22:04, Alan Pope wrote:
> On 23/03/12 21:45, Daniel Case wrote:
 On 23 March 2012 21:21, Neil Greenwood
   wrote:
> They spent lots of money testing different behaviours
 In my opinion, this is where the problem lies. The main people
 Linux attracts, no matter which way you look at it, are hackers (in
 the general sense).
> That's exactly the problem we're trying to solve. Not asking the
> target audience, but only asking hackers would be arrogant and
> foolhardy. That's why we don't do that. We do listen to feedback, more
> than you'd imagine, and decisions taken about design (for example) are
> directly affected by user feedback. That doesn't happen for every
> minute decision, but it happens.
> 
> We're also making it easier to buy computers with Ubuntu pre-installed
> by talking to hardware vendors, to get it shipped from the factory.
> It's hard work and takes a long time to do but we're getting there.
> 
 Which brings me back to my first point, who's going to advocate
 Ubuntu if it annoys the hacker and makes life more difficult?

> Those of us who do like it, do use it and believe it is the right path
> for Ubuntu to take. If you don't then you have a number of options:-
> 
> * Install a different desktop environment on your Ubuntu system
> * Join the discussion on the various Ubuntu development lists to
> articulate how we're doing things wrong
> * Test and file bugs when things don't work correctly
> * Provide patches or programs to help Ubuntu&  Unity to appeal
> 
> Personally I am in this for the long haul. Each 6 monthly release is
> fantastic, but I'm thinking years away from now, and I'm happy to
> persevere through the rough times because I think the long term goal
> is worth it.
> 
> Frankly if people who are "inside" our community, "hackers" as you
> call them aren't willing to get stuck in then Linux Mint, Debian,
> Fedora and hundreds of other distros are ->  that way. Enjoy!
> 
> Cheers,
>>
> oooh and who took your dummy away...that was my reaction when I read 
> that...but the thing is, you work for Canonical, so your going to 
> say that, whatever happenswhat is frustrating is people on here 
> are giving an opinion and its being thrown aside is if it doesnt matter 
> because you have all this research into what people like, but people are 
> here telling you different, that has been going on since 11.04 people 
> have said they dont like it..and its not getting better its getting 
> worse.

I think that is an unfair response. Alan has personally given me
unbelievable support over many years  for my activities as a volunteer
advocate of FLOSS and Ubuntu.
What he says is sensible and quite proper, and I am delighted that he
has the courage to post on this group.
-- 
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread alan c
On 23/03/12 21:06, Alan Bell wrote:
> On 23/03/12 20:16, Hakan Koseoglu wrote:
>> 
>> Treating users as idiots is not a policy, it's a mistake.
>> As soon as I find a distribution worth installing everywhere, I'll be
>> switching. Mint doesn't cut the mustard. I'm a Kubuntu/Lubuntu user on
>> desktop and Ubuntu server  but I don't want to anymore, I don't want
>> to have anything with Ubuntu products.
>>
>> I know the PR spin, "it's to make new users' life easy" yada yada
>> yada. But the new users don't discover Linux all by themselves, in
>> most cases someone shows them and I don't want to show and talk about
>> Ubuntu to anyone anymore.
>> 
>>
> ok, well as long as you are still using Free Software it is all good. 
> The dodge thing was something Mark Shuttleworth really liked too, but 
> when they did lots of user testing and watched the videos of people 
> being confused by it they dropped the concept.
> there is more about the decision here
> https://lists.launchpad.net/unity-design/msg07835.html

When I used unity for the very first time I was irritated and confused
by the dodging launcher, and I can easily understand that novices and
newcomers will have problems also. And at the time my explicit advice
to someone who was going to put it on their Dad's PC was to - at least
 -  stop the autohide launcher.

As a more fluent and more confident user now I am probably happy with
dodge or autohide, but  I do realise  this stuff is cutting edge and
still developing. And doge launcher is pretty neat.
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-25 Thread alan c
On 23/03/12 21:06, Daniel Case wrote:
> I'm not saying don't evolve, just evolve in a way that most users
> agree is a good idea


Catch 22. Unfortunately  the vocal  people who do not  like something
have plenty of placard space and ability to dampen a new flame.
Evolution is a risk, a real risk. It happens by (sometimes brutal) death.
And the good guys do not necessarily win. Canonical is not perfect,
including its community marketing interaction, but it is trying to
evolve stuff 'we' know and love and trying to look to a bigger future.
Are 'we', 'most' users? This is the thinking of a status quo. If this
direction of evolution was easy then why has it not been done before?
So, what exactly is a 'good' idea?, and who are 'most' people?
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-24 Thread Avi Greenbury
Neil Greenwood wrote:

> Well, you can volunteer to support it, and put the option back in. Or
> pay someone to do it if you don't have the skills yourself. That's
> the joy of free software.
> 
> However, Canonical decided they weren't going to keep paying to
> support it. That's their right too.
> 

I don't think anyone's questioned that. In fact your the first here (as
far as I can see) to mention whether it's some right of Canonical's or
not to do this.

This, I think, is the problem with a lot of responses to these
messages. They're not straight-up complaints so much as expressions of
disappointment in the main. Nobody's trying to claim that Canonicalis
somehow obliged to not change the DE or not make the backgrounds of
terminals purple[0], or that users are somehow tied to using
Ubuntu (or, even, that Ubuntu users are tied to Unity)[1] - they're just
rather disappointed that Ubuntu appears to be no longer interested in
what it used to be interested in, and specifically the bits of its past
interest that an apparently vocal part of the userbase particularly
liked it for. 

Perhaps the reasons are sound; I can't honestly claim to
know what they are since the only response anybody seems to get to
recent questioning of Unity's behaviour is "try Fedora".

To simply say that these users can use something else is rather missing
the point; in the main they're the user group who are already aware of
other distros (even if, somehow, the knowledge of other DEs for Ubuntu
has escaped the majority of them), but they're still perfectly entitled
to be disappointed in the apparent large shift in direction. I *want* to
use and like and support Ubuntu (and even Unity) for reasons that I'm
having trouble remembering, but that doesn't mean I actually *do*.

Anyway, I decided to stop getting into these discussions - I only
meant to take issue with your precise argument rather than actually
pick a side here.

-- 
Avi


[0] I still check the VGA lead every time I log into a Ubuntu server :)

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-24 Thread Alan Pope
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 24/03/12 20:20, Sean Miller wrote:
> On 24 March 2012 19:41, Pete Smout  wrote:
> 
>> It is about personal choice but Unity is not mine! Xubuntu here I
>> come!
>> 
> 
> That's how I feel too.
> 
> Do Canonical take any notes of these lists?
> 

Plenty of Canonical employees and Ubuntu community members are on this
list, although not (AIUI) the ones that can make decisions about these
things.

If you have any useful feedback I would _strongly_ recommend using the
correct mailing list for the job. If you want to provide feedback and
suggestions for improvements to Unity then the 'Unity Design' list is
the best place to go.

https://launchpad.net/~unity-design

Complaining in the wrong place is shouting into the void.

Cheers,
- -- 
Alan Pope
Engineering Manager

Canonical - Product Strategy
+44 (0) 7973 620 164
alan.p...@canonical.com
http://ubuntu.com/
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-24 Thread Sean Miller
On 24 March 2012 19:41, Pete Smout  wrote:

> It is about personal choice but Unity is not mine! Xubuntu here I come!
>

That's how I feel too.

Do Canonical take any notes of these lists?

Sean
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-24 Thread Pete Smout

On 24/03/12 11:58, Barry Drake wrote:

On 24/03/12 01:38, Liam Proven wrote:

However, I do think that Unity in general is not /nearly/ as
customisable as Linux users tend to be used to.


At the moment, yes. When Unity first came out I was disappointed to
discover that it was not based on simple text conf files as is usual in
gnu/linux. Things are moving though.
http://mhall119.com/2012/01/simplified-unity-lens-development-with-singlet/
shows use of a python class library to take much of the pain out of lens
scripting. It won't be long before somebody comes up with a gui ide that
builds a lens using drag-n-drop or similar. It's the kind of thing I'd
have tackled myself when I was younger.

I'm prepared to wait - Unity is perfectly usable as is - and that
doesn't seem to be the case with Windows 8 according to all the reports.

Regards, Barry.


Hi,
Having come relatively late to Ubuntu (8.10) I have become used to the 
customizeabilty of GNOME, and I don't want slag off many peoples hard 
work, but Unity as it stands is not for me (everything must change, and 
hopefully get better) but I do feel that it is going down the Windows 
route of 'this is how it is like it or lump it! To me this is not the 
LINUX way.


A friend of mine has just discovered 'Ultimate OS' a *buntu fork with a 
choice of de's built in, this looks very good and if choice is continued 
to be taken away from me then I will have will have to explore alternate 
options myself!


This is not an easy decision for me as I have been shouting the virtues 
of Ubuntu from the metaphorical hilltops since I first stumbled across 
it, but if pushed will also shout about how let down I feel by the dev's.


It is about personal choice but Unity is not mine! Xubuntu here I come!

Pete


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-24 Thread Barry Drake

On 24/03/12 01:38, Liam Proven wrote:
However, I do think that Unity in general is not /nearly/ as 
customisable as Linux users tend to be used to.


At the moment, yes.  When Unity first came out I was disappointed to 
discover that it was not based on simple text conf files as is usual in 
gnu/linux.  Things are moving though.  
http://mhall119.com/2012/01/simplified-unity-lens-development-with-singlet/ 
shows use of a python class library to take much of the pain out of lens 
scripting.  It won't be long before somebody comes up with a gui ide 
that builds a lens using drag-n-drop or similar.  It's the kind of thing 
I'd have tackled myself when I was younger.


I'm prepared to wait - Unity is perfectly usable as is - and that 
doesn't seem to be the case with Windows 8 according to all the reports.


Regards,Barry.

--
Barry Drake is a member of the the Ubuntu Advertising team.
http://ubuntuadverts.org/


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-24 Thread Chris Penston
I came late to Computing (in my late thirties as a mature student at 
University, I'm 56 now). I've been mucking about with Linux since around 
1998 when it took me about four days to get a Red Hat release partially 
working on a laptop.
I've been looking with interest at the posts on here for a number of 
years and learned an awful amount about gnu-linux in general and Ubuntu 
in particular from you wonderful techies without ever posting (I haven't 
yet /not/ found an answer to a question already posted by someone else).
I thought I might just put my two penn'orth in on this particular 
subject where there seems to be such strong feelings about the direction 
things are going.
For me the debate has never been about how this looks, or whether that 
is the best distro (my 83 year old mother uses Xubuntu, though she 
doesn't realise it, she just knows what she needs to press to get the 
internet or email).  Nor does it seem to be the major factor to the 
myriad of people that I try to introduce to Ubuntu on a daily basis.  
For those that /do /show//interest after overcoming their innate 
distrust of 'something for nothing', it is the revelation that there is 
a massive community of people 'out there' willing to give time, 
expertise and money to something they passionately believe in and that 
in a world seemingly run by a bunch of self interested grifters, there 
are alternative ways of doing things.  That collaboration and 
co-operation can actually produce something better than naked 
competition and greed (Windows 8?, what a pointless rip off).
For those getting worked up about Launchers and  and such like, reminds 
me of those ancient philosophers who spent their time worrying about how 
many angels could dance on the head of a pin.  The fact is, there is an 
Ubuntu distribution for pretty much everybody (and I always try to make 
a point of showing these alternatives once someone has shown a 
willingness to try Ubuntu).  People tend to be impressed by the novelty 
that they have a choice.  Almost always, the reaction is astonishment 
that something can be so good without costing anything 'so there must be 
a catch'.
I haven't tried 12.04 yet and when I do, I daresay here will be things 
that I don't like at first.  Personally I'm comfortable with that.  
There were things I didn't like about that version of Red Hat all those 
years ago.  The difficulty appears to me to be the same now as it was 
then; the restrictive practices of proprietry software and hardware 
vendors and the massive negative propaganda of the big corporations 
aided by ignorance in government.  So I would say to everyone involved 
'keep calm and carry on!'  The times are changing.


Chris

On 23/03/12 22:44, Alan Pope wrote:

-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 23/03/12 22:11, scoundrel50a wrote:

oooh and who took your dummy away...

Actually my patience is somewhat thin today because we cremated my
best friends Mum. Perhaps that has a bearing on my response, but it
puts things in perspective. Life is short.

Sorry if it seems that I'm being more harsh than usual. I'm just
pretty tired of people bitching about Ubuntu and Unity and doing
nothing about it but sending rants to people who can't actually fix
the problem.

We have developer lists and IRC channels for a reason, use them.


that was my reaction when I read that...but the thing is, you
work for Canonical, so your going to say that, whatever
happens

That's pretty insulting to me. Well done.


what is frustrating is people on here are giving an opinion

"Opinions are like, everyone has one".


and its being thrown aside is if it doesnt matter because you have
all this research into what people like, but people are here
telling you different, that has been going on since 11.04 people
have said they dont like it..and its not getting better its
getting worse.


Other distros are available.

Cheers,
- -- 
Alan Pope

Engineering Manager

Canonical - Product Strategy
+44 (0) 7973 620 164
alan.p...@canonical.com
http://ubuntu.com/
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-24 Thread Neil Greenwood
Well, you can volunteer to support it, and put the option back in. Or pay
someone to do it if you don't have the skills yourself. That's the joy of
free software.

However, Canonical decided they weren't going to keep paying to support it.
That's their right too.

Neil.

P.S. Sorry for the brevity, this is typed on my phone.

On Mar 23, 2012 10:45 PM, "John Oliver"  wrote:
>
> Personally, I think that the code should continue to be maintained. The
argument being put forth sounds to me like "It is not the default,
therefore no-one can have it". This argument does not work - look at
Windows - the taskbar has an autohide option. Look at OS X; the much
gone-on-about "full screen" mode (a.k.a. hide the dock) has just been added.
>
>
>
> --
> Kind Regards,
> John Oliver
> jp.oli...@ntlworld.com
>
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>
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Liam Proven
On 23 March 2012 20:16, Hakan Koseoglu  wrote:
> On 23 March 2012 19:54, Neil Greenwood  wrote:
>> It's policy. The decision was made after usability testing, where users got
>> confused when first maximising a window. "where's the launcher gone now?"
>> And because the option was being removed, the decision was also made to
>> remove the code to reduce the maintenance requirements.
> 
> Treating users as idiots is not a policy, it's a mistake.

Whereas I agree with this statement, I don't think that in this
instance Ubuntu are doing so.

However, I do think that Unity in general is not /nearly/ as
customisable as Linux users tend to be used to.

There always were 2 opposing positions - KDE which has 436546834
different options to tweak, but still can't do a decent vertical
taskbar, for instance, versus GNOME, which removed all the confusing
twiddly stuff in the name of simplicity. But customisability was still
there - for instance, in KDE, you can set the size of new terminal
windows. There was no such option in GNOME, but if you shut down with
a terminal window open, it remembered it and new ones opened that
size.

Same effect, fewer options.

But Unity is not very customisable. You can do a bit more with
CompizConfig and Confity, but not enough.

If people want the Launcher at the bottom or the right, they should be
permitted - but no, you're not allowed.

If they want to have the Launcher fixed, autohide or dodge, they
should - but no. Not allowed.

If they want an auto-hiding top panel, even if that conflicts with the
auto-hiding menus, let them - but no.

If they want the Ubuntu button in the panel (as in 10.10 - 11.04) or
the first icon, let them choose - but no.

If they want to right-click the Ubuntu button and have a context menu
of program groups, as used to be there IIRC, let them - but no.

Unity is getting quite mature now. None of what I'm proposing is new
code - this is all either restoring features that were one present, or
things that have been accomplished by hacks, config tweaks and so on.
It's all doable. But it's not getting any more configurable - in fact,
options are /disappearing./ This is a very serious error of judgement,
I think.

I think Linux users are used to a higher degree of configurability
than Windows or Mac users, and Unity takes it away. I quite like
Unity, but I am not impressed by some of the changes in 12.04.

> As soon as I find a distribution worth installing everywhere, I'll be
> switching. Mint doesn't cut the mustard. I'm a Kubuntu/Lubuntu user on
> desktop and Ubuntu server  but I don't want to anymore, I don't want
> to have anything with Ubuntu products.

Linux Mint Debian Edition? Crunchbang?

Or Debian itself. I think those are your main options.

Or if you don't mind losing APT, then Arch Linux, which is getting a
lot of attention these days.

-- 
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Email: lpro...@cix.co.uk • GMail/G+/Twitter/Flickr/Facebook: lproven
MSN: lpro...@hotmail.com • Skype/AIM/Yahoo/LinkedIn: liamproven
Tel: +44 20-8685-0498 • Cell: +44 7939-087884

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Alan Pope
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 23/03/12 22:55, Daniel Case wrote:
> I was just trying to highlight the general problem I've been
> having and have a constructive discussion on the mailing list to
> see what others thought, I'm not attacking Ubuntu or Unity in any
> way and I think it is great that Canonical are trying to evolve. I
> just think we need more customization options, I will go ahead and
> try to find the right people to bring this up with :)
> 

Take a look at "My Unity". It has some config options, but maybe not
enough, I don't know.

- -- 
Alan Pope
Engineering Manager

Canonical - Product Strategy
+44 (0) 7973 620 164
alan.p...@canonical.com
http://ubuntu.com/
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Daniel Case
On 23 March 2012 22:44, Alan Pope  wrote:
> Actually my patience is somewhat thin today because we cremated my
> best friends Mum. Perhaps that has a bearing on my response, but it
> puts things in perspective. Life is short.

I'm sorry to hear that Alan, my thoughts are with your friend and his
family, I hope they are okay. There is never any need for personal
attacks over a mailing list.

I was just trying to highlight the general problem I've been having
and have a constructive discussion on the mailing list to see what
others thought, I'm not attacking Ubuntu or Unity in any way and I
think it is great that Canonical are trying to evolve. I just think we
need more customization options, I will go ahead and try to find the
right people to bring this up with :)

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Alan Pope
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 23/03/12 22:41, Daniel Case wrote:
> On 23 March 2012 22:34, Barry Drake 
> wrote:
>> Anyone who still has doubt, start testing Windows 8 .
>> 'shoot' and 'foot' spring to mind.
> 
> That's certainly true. But I can't help feeling that everything is 
> heading towards the "post-PC" era too early. For example, I can
> see Unity working perfectly on a touch screen.

Nah, right now Unity is rubbish on a touch screen :D

It's also not either/or. Ubuntu is a desktop distro. In the future
there may be TV/Tablet/Phone/Fridge/Toaster versions, but right now
it's on desktops/laptops/servers/clouds. That's where our core
competency lies.

> I genuinely care about the Ubuntu community as a whole, it feels
> like home since I've been here and always welcomed for almost 5
> years, I know that ranting, shouting and saying I'm going to leave
> won't help (and I don't think I could bring myself to do so anyway)
> but I was hoping that highlighting the issues as I see them may
> help more.
> 

They do help, if brought up in the right way, in the right place. :)

Cheers,
- -- 
Alan Pope
Engineering Manager

Canonical - Product Strategy
+44 (0) 7973 620 164
alan.p...@canonical.com
http://ubuntu.com/
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Alan Pope
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 23/03/12 22:23, Daniel Case wrote:
> New users like the OS to guide them through the process, whereas 
> hackers want it to get out of their way so they can be more 
> productive. Two very different approaches, you either confuse one
> or annoy the other and it's very difficult to reach that middle
> ground. I personally would have even gone for having two separate
> systems under the "Ubuntu" name to cater to both.
> 

This is a popular misconception. There's about 500 people who work for
Canonical, most (nearly all) of which use Ubuntu all day every day.
They range from events management, HR, finance to developers,
designers, project managers, product managers, documentation experts
and blue sky thinkers.

We cover a surprising number of use cases in one company. The
developers are unsurprisingly very technical users and there are also
many non-technical users. To say we don't cater to both is not true in
my opinion.

Cheers,
- -- 
Alan Pope
Engineering Manager

Canonical - Product Strategy
+44 (0) 7973 620 164
alan.p...@canonical.com
http://ubuntu.com/
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread scoundrel50a

On 23/03/2012 22:44, Alan Pope wrote:

-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 23/03/12 22:11, scoundrel50a wrote:

oooh and who took your dummy away...

Actually my patience is somewhat thin today because we cremated my
best friends Mum. Perhaps that has a bearing on my response, but it
puts things in perspective. Life is short.

Sorry if it seems that I'm being more harsh than usual. I'm just
pretty tired of people bitching about Ubuntu and Unity and doing
nothing about it but sending rants to people who can't actually fix
the problem.

We have developer lists and IRC channels for a reason, use them.


that was my reaction when I read that...but the thing is, you
work for Canonical, so your going to say that, whatever
happens

That's pretty insulting to me. Well done.


It wasnt meant to be insulting, and I am sorry you took it that 
way.I never once since 11.04 have seen anything about testing, 
being involved, but I see people on here and have had to ask myself, and 
there is a tendency to either ignore or react the way you have, and you 
wonder why people get angry...first I have heard of the testing done 
in this threadwould have been nice to be involved in that...



what is frustrating is people on here are giving an opinion

"Opinions are like, everyone has one".


and its being thrown aside is if it doesnt matter because you have
all this research into what people like, but people are here
telling you different, that has been going on since 11.04 people
have said they dont like it..and its not getting better its
getting worse.


Other distros are available.


and there you go again..


Cheers,
- -- 
Alan Pope

Engineering Manager

Canonical - Product Strategy
+44 (0) 7973 620 164
alan.p...@canonical.com
http://ubuntu.com/
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread John Oliver
Personally, I think that the code should continue to be maintained. The 
argument being put forth sounds to me like "It is not the default, 
therefore no-one can have it". This argument does not work - look at 
Windows - the taskbar has an autohide option. Look at OS X; the much 
gone-on-about "full screen" mode (a.k.a. hide the dock) has just been added.




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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Alan Pope
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 23/03/12 22:11, scoundrel50a wrote:
> oooh and who took your dummy away...

Actually my patience is somewhat thin today because we cremated my
best friends Mum. Perhaps that has a bearing on my response, but it
puts things in perspective. Life is short.

Sorry if it seems that I'm being more harsh than usual. I'm just
pretty tired of people bitching about Ubuntu and Unity and doing
nothing about it but sending rants to people who can't actually fix
the problem.

We have developer lists and IRC channels for a reason, use them.

> that was my reaction when I read that...but the thing is, you
> work for Canonical, so your going to say that, whatever
> happens

That's pretty insulting to me. Well done.

> what is frustrating is people on here are giving an opinion

"Opinions are like , everyone has one".

> and its being thrown aside is if it doesnt matter because you have
> all this research into what people like, but people are here
> telling you different, that has been going on since 11.04 people 
> have said they dont like it..and its not getting better its
> getting worse.
> 

Other distros are available.

Cheers,
- -- 
Alan Pope
Engineering Manager

Canonical - Product Strategy
+44 (0) 7973 620 164
alan.p...@canonical.com
http://ubuntu.com/
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread scoundrel50a

On 23/03/2012 22:34, Barry Drake wrote:

On 23/03/12 22:04, Alan Pope wrote:
Personally I am in this for the long haul. Each 6 monthly release is 
fantastic, but I'm thinking years away from now, and I'm happy to 
persevere through the rough times because I think the long term goal 
is worth it.


Alan - well said! Folk who really want to see progress will go along 
with what Ubuntu is doing right now. Sure, it isn't perfect, but it is 
amazing. Anyone who still has doubt, start testing Windows 8 . 
'shoot' and 'foot' spring to mind.


Regards, Barry.

Windows 8 is like running the phone version, which is about 
apps...which is the almost the same as running google chrome OS 
which I have had a go at both, if people have wondows phones its just a 
continuation/upgrade, from what I have been playing withit takes a 
bit of getting used to as far as using other windows programs, but its 
not that confusing.






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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Daniel Case
On 23 March 2012 22:34, Barry Drake  wrote:
>  Anyone who still has doubt, start testing Windows 8 .  'shoot' and
> 'foot' spring to mind.

That's certainly true. But I can't help feeling that everything is
heading towards the "post-PC" era too early. For example, I can see
Unity working perfectly on a touch screen. I genuinely care about the
Ubuntu community as a whole, it feels like home since I've been here
and always welcomed for almost 5 years, I know that ranting, shouting
and saying I'm going to leave won't help (and I don't think I could
bring myself to do so anyway) but I was hoping that highlighting the
issues as I see them may help more.

PS. Sorry for taking over your email thread Barry... :)

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Barry Drake

On 23/03/12 22:04, Alan Pope wrote:
Personally I am in this for the long haul. Each 6 monthly release is 
fantastic, but I'm thinking years away from now, and I'm happy to 
persevere through the rough times because I think the long term goal 
is worth it.


Alan - well said!  Folk who really want to see progress will go along 
with what Ubuntu is doing right now.  Sure, it isn't perfect, but it is 
amazing.  Anyone who still has doubt, start testing Windows 8 .  
'shoot' and 'foot' spring to mind.


Regards,Barry.

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http://ubuntuadverts.org/


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Daniel Case
Hi Alan,

I appreciate what the design teams are trying to do and I appreciate
that it is very difficult (or even impossible -as I have never seen it
done effectively) to provide the same operating system that works for
both new users and hackers alike.

New users like the OS to guide them through the process, whereas
hackers want it to get out of their way so they can be more
productive. Two very different approaches, you either confuse one or
annoy the other and it's very difficult to reach that middle ground. I
personally would have even gone for having two separate systems under
the "Ubuntu" name to cater to both.

I've been in the Ubuntu community for 5 years already and don't plan
on leaving any time soon, but I think there needs to be some
representation of the hacker culture that Ubuntu has built up over the
years so that we can find the middle ground, it seems to me as though
Canonical wants to believe that we are not here!

I personally like the interactions I've had with Unity. I can see why
it would be appealing to a user who just wants to go on Facebook or
write some documents, but I can also see the reason that many of us
folk who have been here for a long time don't like it. I've seen lots
of criticism of little parts and even some general big rants, I'm
trying to come at this in a more level headed way to work with you on
solving the bigger problem, trying to please both sets of users and
everyone in between.

So I'm not saying Unity is fundamentally broken, it's great for one
set of users, but I think canonical needs to accommodate us with more
customization options and hacks so that we can all move forward.

Daniel

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread scoundrel50a

On 23/03/2012 22:04, Alan Pope wrote:

-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 23/03/12 21:45, Daniel Case wrote:

On 23 March 2012 21:21, Neil Greenwood
  wrote:

They spent lots of money testing different behaviours

In my opinion, this is where the problem lies. The main people
Linux attracts, no matter which way you look at it, are hackers (in
the general sense).

That's exactly the problem we're trying to solve. Not asking the
target audience, but only asking hackers would be arrogant and
foolhardy. That's why we don't do that. We do listen to feedback, more
than you'd imagine, and decisions taken about design (for example) are
directly affected by user feedback. That doesn't happen for every
minute decision, but it happens.

We're also making it easier to buy computers with Ubuntu pre-installed
by talking to hardware vendors, to get it shipped from the factory.
It's hard work and takes a long time to do but we're getting there.


Which brings me back to my first point, who's going to advocate
Ubuntu if it annoys the hacker and makes life more difficult?


Those of us who do like it, do use it and believe it is the right path
for Ubuntu to take. If you don't then you have a number of options:-

* Install a different desktop environment on your Ubuntu system
* Join the discussion on the various Ubuntu development lists to
articulate how we're doing things wrong
* Test and file bugs when things don't work correctly
* Provide patches or programs to help Ubuntu&  Unity to appeal

Personally I am in this for the long haul. Each 6 monthly release is
fantastic, but I'm thinking years away from now, and I'm happy to
persevere through the rough times because I think the long term goal
is worth it.

Frankly if people who are "inside" our community, "hackers" as you
call them aren't willing to get stuck in then Linux Mint, Debian,
Fedora and hundreds of other distros are ->  that way. Enjoy!

Cheers,
- -- 
Alan Pope

Engineering Manager

Canonical - Product Strategy
+44 (0) 7973 620 164
alan.p...@canonical.com
http://ubuntu.com/
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oooh and who took your dummy away...that was my reaction when I read 
that...but the thing is, you work for Canonical, so your going to 
say that, whatever happenswhat is frustrating is people on here 
are giving an opinion and its being thrown aside is if it doesnt matter 
because you have all this research into what people like, but people are 
here telling you different, that has been going on since 11.04 people 
have said they dont like it..and its not getting better its getting 
worse.




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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Alan Pope
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 23/03/12 21:45, Daniel Case wrote:
> On 23 March 2012 21:21, Neil Greenwood
>  wrote:
>> They spent lots of money testing different behaviours
> 
> In my opinion, this is where the problem lies. The main people
> Linux attracts, no matter which way you look at it, are hackers (in
> the general sense).

That's exactly the problem we're trying to solve. Not asking the
target audience, but only asking hackers would be arrogant and
foolhardy. That's why we don't do that. We do listen to feedback, more
than you'd imagine, and decisions taken about design (for example) are
directly affected by user feedback. That doesn't happen for every
minute decision, but it happens.

We're also making it easier to buy computers with Ubuntu pre-installed
by talking to hardware vendors, to get it shipped from the factory.
It's hard work and takes a long time to do but we're getting there.

> Which brings me back to my first point, who's going to advocate
> Ubuntu if it annoys the hacker and makes life more difficult?
> 

Those of us who do like it, do use it and believe it is the right path
for Ubuntu to take. If you don't then you have a number of options:-

* Install a different desktop environment on your Ubuntu system
* Join the discussion on the various Ubuntu development lists to
articulate how we're doing things wrong
* Test and file bugs when things don't work correctly
* Provide patches or programs to help Ubuntu & Unity to appeal

Personally I am in this for the long haul. Each 6 monthly release is
fantastic, but I'm thinking years away from now, and I'm happy to
persevere through the rough times because I think the long term goal
is worth it.

Frankly if people who are "inside" our community, "hackers" as you
call them aren't willing to get stuck in then Linux Mint, Debian,
Fedora and hundreds of other distros are -> that way. Enjoy!

Cheers,
- -- 
Alan Pope
Engineering Manager

Canonical - Product Strategy
+44 (0) 7973 620 164
alan.p...@canonical.com
http://ubuntu.com/
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Daniel Case
On 23 March 2012 21:21, Neil Greenwood  wrote:
> They spent lots of money testing different behaviours

In my opinion, this is where the problem lies. The main people Linux
attracts, no matter which way you look at it, are hackers (in the
general sense). The reason Ubuntu grew was because the hackers
advocated it, gave it to users to try when Windows broke or when they
complained and could reasonably say "this is better". It's a hacker
culture, reaching out to the wider world and telling them there is
something different, something better that you can try, and taught
them how to use it. Now hackers are good with computers, they know
what they are doing (in an ideal world)

I gave 10.04 to someone who originally had Windows 7, he didn't know
much about computers, you should have seen his face when he realized
he could have all his applications at the bottom in an easy to reach
fashion again and we talked about how "simplicity" and "design" go
hand in hand and conquer all others.

The more complex it is to navigate through to get to what you want to
do, the more of a pain in the ass it becomes. The OS should be
seamless, it should keep out of the way when it isn't needed, and
allow users to find precisely what they want quickly when it is
needed, that to me, is a perfect OS. The direction we are all heading
is away from simplicity.

Simplicity is key to hackers, Unity interferes with that, it makes you
more hands on with the OS. This perhaps makes it marginally easier for
the new user, but it makes life more difficult for the hacker.

Which brings me back to my first point, who's going to advocate Ubuntu
if it annoys the hacker and makes life more difficult?

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Colin Law
On 23 March 2012 21:25, Colin Law  wrote:
> On 23 March 2012 21:16, Daniel Case  wrote:
>> On 23 March 2012 21:11, Colin Law  wrote:
>>> It doesn't have to be there all the time, there is an option to hide
>>> it.  It then appears when the mouse is pushed against the edge of the
>>> screen (on 12.04)
>>
>> I noticed this, however it often comes out when I go for the "close"
>> button on a window. The original "dodge" function was a perfect fit,
>> is there no way we can have this reinstated along with the other
>> options as well? That way it keeps everyone happy
>
> With unity-2d on 12.04 it does not slide out if you hit the side in
> the top panel itself (by the close button for maximised windows).  I
> don't know about unity-3d but I guess it should be the same there.
> Also I think there will be a sensitivity setting for how quickly it
> appears.

And I have just done an update and can now specify which monitor I
want the launcher on (or all).  Excellent.

Colin

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Colin Law
On 23 March 2012 21:16, Daniel Case  wrote:
> On 23 March 2012 21:11, Colin Law  wrote:
>> It doesn't have to be there all the time, there is an option to hide
>> it.  It then appears when the mouse is pushed against the edge of the
>> screen (on 12.04)
>
> I noticed this, however it often comes out when I go for the "close"
> button on a window. The original "dodge" function was a perfect fit,
> is there no way we can have this reinstated along with the other
> options as well? That way it keeps everyone happy

With unity-2d on 12.04 it does not slide out if you hit the side in
the top panel itself (by the close button for maximised windows).  I
don't know about unity-3d but I guess it should be the same there.
Also I think there will be a sensitivity setting for how quickly it
appears.

Colin

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Neil Greenwood
I know some find it a bit annoying, but Canonical didn't just decide this.
They spent lots of money testing different behaviours with users with a
range of experience of computers. I believe all the users tested had little
experience of Linux.

Mark Shuttleworth even had to say that the results were the opposite of
what he first thought before the testing.

Neil.

P.S. Sorry for the brevity, this is typed on my phone.

On Mar 23, 2012 8:17 PM, "Hakan Koseoglu"  wrote:
>
> On 23 March 2012 19:54, Neil Greenwood 
wrote:
> > It's policy. The decision was made after usability testing, where users
got
> > confused when first maximising a window. "where's the launcher gone
now?"
> > And because the option was being removed, the decision was also made to
> > remove the code to reduce the maintenance requirements.
> 
> Treating users as idiots is not a policy, it's a mistake.
> As soon as I find a distribution worth installing everywhere, I'll be
> switching. Mint doesn't cut the mustard. I'm a Kubuntu/Lubuntu user on
> desktop and Ubuntu server  but I don't want to anymore, I don't want
> to have anything with Ubuntu products.
>
> I know the PR spin, "it's to make new users' life easy" yada yada
> yada. But the new users don't discover Linux all by themselves, in
> most cases someone shows them and I don't want to show and talk about
> Ubuntu to anyone anymore.
> 
>
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> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Daniel Case
On 23 March 2012 21:11, Colin Law  wrote:
> It doesn't have to be there all the time, there is an option to hide
> it.  It then appears when the mouse is pushed against the edge of the
> screen (on 12.04)

I noticed this, however it often comes out when I go for the "close"
button on a window. The original "dodge" function was a perfect fit,
is there no way we can have this reinstated along with the other
options as well? That way it keeps everyone happy

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Colin Law
On 23 March 2012 21:06, Daniel Case  wrote:
> On 23 March 2012 20:16, Hakan Koseoglu  wrote:
>>But the new users don't discover Linux all by themselves, in
>> most cases someone shows them and I don't want to show and talk about
>> Ubuntu to anyone anymore.
>
> I discovered it myself, but I agree that the launcher should not
> permanently be there. This drove me up the wall while I was testing
> it, almost 10% of my screen is unusable the majority of the time (how
> will that work on 9" netbooks?)

It doesn't have to be there all the time, there is an option to hide
it.  It then appears when the mouse is pushed against the edge of the
screen (on 12.04)

Colin

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Daniel Case
On 23 March 2012 20:16, Hakan Koseoglu  wrote:
>But the new users don't discover Linux all by themselves, in
> most cases someone shows them and I don't want to show and talk about
> Ubuntu to anyone anymore.

I discovered it myself, but I agree that the launcher should not
permanently be there. This drove me up the wall while I was testing
it, almost 10% of my screen is unusable the majority of the time (how
will that work on 9" netbooks?)

I'm still on 10.04 which I really love as a system, my menu, icons,
notifications etc are where I expect them to be, it's fast and
reliable and I know when, for example, I have two terminal windows
open, and at a glance what I have on each virtual desktop. My menus
are tucked away until I need them.

I started with 7.04 and used to be on the cutting edge right up until
10.04, I installed 10.10 (when unity first hit) and hated the
instability of the system. Now I test each release in a virtual
machine from time to time (I tested the beta for 12.04 a few days ago)

I'm not saying don't evolve, just evolve in a way that most users
agree is a good idea, I thought that was the aim of Linux? Who's
driving the development course here? The users or canonical?

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Alan Bell

On 23/03/12 20:16, Hakan Koseoglu wrote:


Treating users as idiots is not a policy, it's a mistake.
As soon as I find a distribution worth installing everywhere, I'll be
switching. Mint doesn't cut the mustard. I'm a Kubuntu/Lubuntu user on
desktop and Ubuntu server  but I don't want to anymore, I don't want
to have anything with Ubuntu products.

I know the PR spin, "it's to make new users' life easy" yada yada
yada. But the new users don't discover Linux all by themselves, in
most cases someone shows them and I don't want to show and talk about
Ubuntu to anyone anymore.


ok, well as long as you are still using Free Software it is all good. 
The dodge thing was something Mark Shuttleworth really liked too, but 
when they did lots of user testing and watched the videos of people 
being confused by it they dropped the concept.

there is more about the decision here
https://lists.launchpad.net/unity-design/msg07835.html

Alan

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Hakan Koseoglu
On 23 March 2012 19:54, Neil Greenwood  wrote:
> It's policy. The decision was made after usability testing, where users got
> confused when first maximising a window. "where's the launcher gone now?"
> And because the option was being removed, the decision was also made to
> remove the code to reduce the maintenance requirements.

Treating users as idiots is not a policy, it's a mistake.
As soon as I find a distribution worth installing everywhere, I'll be
switching. Mint doesn't cut the mustard. I'm a Kubuntu/Lubuntu user on
desktop and Ubuntu server  but I don't want to anymore, I don't want
to have anything with Ubuntu products.

I know the PR spin, "it's to make new users' life easy" yada yada
yada. But the new users don't discover Linux all by themselves, in
most cases someone shows them and I don't want to show and talk about
Ubuntu to anyone anymore.


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Neil Greenwood
It's policy. The decision was made after usability testing, where users got
confused when first maximising a window. "where's the launcher gone now?"
And because the option was being removed, the decision was also made to
remove the code to reduce the maintenance requirements.

Neil.

P.S. Sorry for the brevity and top-posting, this is typed on my phone.

On Mar 23, 2012 6:50 PM, "Barry Drake"  wrote:
>
> Hi there ...   I used to like the way that the launcher used to slide
away when there was a window over it and re-appear when there wasn't.  Now
in Precise, we seem only to be able to have autohide or permanently in
place.   The Compiz configurator and MyUnity both seem to suggest that I
can configure settings that do the slide: they don't seem to do that.
 Anyone here know whether this is current policy on Unity or a bug?
>
> Regards,Barry.
>
> --
> Barry Drake is a member of the the Ubuntu Advertising team.
> http://ubuntuadverts.org/
>
>
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[ubuntu-uk] Unity launcher ....

2012-03-23 Thread Barry Drake
Hi there ...   I used to like the way that the launcher used to slide 
away when there was a window over it and re-appear when there wasn't.  
Now in Precise, we seem only to be able to have autohide or permanently 
in place.   The Compiz configurator and MyUnity both seem to suggest 
that I can configure settings that do the slide: they don't seem to do 
that.  Anyone here know whether this is current policy on Unity or a bug?


Regards,Barry.

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Barry Drake is a member of the the Ubuntu Advertising team.
http://ubuntuadverts.org/


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