2011/9/4 Florian Max florian.muell...@gmail.com:
2011/9/4 Jasper St. Pierre jstpie...@mecheye.net
Have you seen Killing Mode Switch[0]? It wasn't implemented in 3.2
because of time constraints, but it's planned.
The more important reason for not doing it in the 3.2 time frame was that
the
You can pin apps to the dash by dragging them there, or right-click on
its icon in the dash.
On Sun, Sep 4, 2011 at 1:43 AM, Xavier Cho fender_ru...@yahoo.co.kr wrote:
I've been using Gnome 3 for some months, and overall I think it's definitely
a step in the right direction. However, as a long
In that case, we can just remove the application menu altogether and let
them alt-f2 type commands to launch applications.
Providing categorised applications menu is for the case when user
doesn't know the launch command or name of the application he/she wants
to open. And many users prefer mouse
Thanks for the tip. Though, I already know how to use dash.
I guess dash/dock is mainly for the applications which used most often,
and categorised application menu is for those applications which is only
occasionally accessed. And even I already have 15 icons on my dock, I
still find myself
On Sun 04 Sep 2011 08:31, Xavier Cho fender_ru...@yahoo.co.kr writes:
On a side note, I really like to see kind of a 'switchable' dock so I
could change set of applications on it according to task currently I'm
on. For example, when I do some music related work, I often use jackd
related
On Sun, Sep 4, 2011 at 9:25 AM, Xavier Cho fender_ru...@yahoo.co.kr wrote:
In that case, we can just remove the application menu altogether and let
them alt-f2 type commands to launch applications.
Thats not the same thing at all. In case of alt-f2, user has to know
the exact and complete
On Sun, Sep 4, 2011 at 2:31 AM, Xavier Cho fender_ru...@yahoo.co.kr wrote:
Thanks for the tip. Though, I already know how to use dash.
I guess dash/dock is mainly for the applications which used most often,
and categorised application menu is for those applications which is only
occasionally
Ok, I can admit the overview mode is somewhat more user friendly than
alt-f2. But still, demanding users to use their keyboard to perform such
basic task as launching an application is not the way to achieve user
friendliness.
To be more precise, I suppose all those methods of launching
Have you seen Killing Mode Switch[0]? It wasn't implemented in 3.2
because of time constraints, but it's planned.
http://jimmac.musichall.cz/log/?p=1181
On Sun, Sep 4, 2011 at 12:57 PM, Xavier Cho fender_ru...@yahoo.co.kr wrote:
Ok, I can admit the overview mode is somewhat more user friendly
Seems awesome! It's definately an improvement over the current way of
adding dock bar shortcuts. And it looks great too :)
Still I like to navigate through application categories without moving
my mouse from corner to corner or click multiple times to find the right
application.
Maybe we need
2011/9/4 Jasper St. Pierre jstpie...@mecheye.net
Have you seen Killing Mode Switch[0]? It wasn't implemented in 3.2
because of time constraints, but it's planned.
The more important reason for not doing it in the 3.2 time frame was that
the design is unfinished (quote Jakub: don't work on
I've been using Gnome 3 for some months, and overall I think it's definitely a
step in the right direction. However, as a long time Gnome 12 user, I find it
lacking in some aspects in terms of usability and features.
Most of all, I think Gnome 3 requires too much user interaction when
On 4 September 2011 01:43, Xavier Cho fender_ru...@yahoo.co.kr wrote:
Most of all, I think Gnome 3 requires too much user interaction when
navigating in the program menu. In the days of global application menu, when
you need to launch an application all you need to do was 1) click on the
panel
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