First of all, I see a problem with defaults. Whenever an application
wants to inform the user of something, or get feedback on something, it
should use bubbles... that much makes sense. But when it NEEDS
something, when something is so urgent that you would go through all
this trouble to make absolutely sure a user acts on its notification,
then why is it not done automatically?

Of course, I know there is a major problem with this; specifically a
large chunk of the user community (myself included!) don't want our
system updating automatically, and hate things that change under our
feet with a burning passion. But we are all "advanced users". The entire
update process (waiting for a time when computer activity is low,
clicking a button, watching it contact repositories, reviewing selected
updates, watching the downloads and installations) are useless to those
people who don't know what any of these things mean. They just want to
do work, and have a secure system.

So how about this: under installation settings, there is an advanced
button. Under there, add a new checkbox for "Automatically update this
computer" that allows power users to easily control and monitor their
setup, but keep it checked by default, so that normal users never have
to worry about this.

I use Ubuntu because it is the operating system that requires the
minimum amount of configuration to get everything running well enough to
do my work. The pop-under system is harder to reconfigure, and achieves
the stated goal (getting people to update) far less effectively then
doing it automatically.

-- 
[Jaunty] Update Notifier icon would provide useful status information
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/332945
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