Bruce:

My reasoning is this, the "Message Indicator" (being polite) is a
"tweak" that changes the user interface in a way that breaks standard
GNOME behavior.

This may be OK if Ubuntu wants to maintain out of tree patches for
everything in their repository that wants to use the notification area,
this is a lot of packages, but then again, it's their time+effort.

It also means that if I go grab software from some place else or build
something myself, I have to either put up with bugs (user) or release a
standard version for normal GNOME and anything that's not Ubuntu, and
one for Ubuntu specifically so that it obeys this "wonderful gadget"
(being extremely polite).

Now for Sebastien:

It's not right to tell a user to go add more fluff to make the software
behave appropriately, it's also extraneous.

Let's take the example of web standards, we all know where Internet
Explorer has been, Microsoft was so worried about tacking on whatever
widgets they could and wanted non standard behavior, now they have no
less than 4 rendering engines behavior sets in IE8, this standard GNOME
desktop plugin you mention immediately makes me thing of that.

Now I have no idea, nor do I really care if you guys have focus groups,
or "where you get this" (again being extremely courteous), but to me, as
a user of GNOME, and a power user of Linux, I can't help but to be
corralled here just a little, this behavior is about the grossest thing
I've seen done to GNOME since the Suse "Choose Your Own Adventure" menu,
and that really is just how I feel about it. Sorry if you can't take a
little pinch of criticism.

-- 
Closing  or removing indicator-applet does not restore correct GNOME behavior
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/346159
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