Another side effect of the aesthetically curious decision with regards
to stacks of notifications.

Previously, an application elegantly provided stacks of notifications
via MacSlow's most impressive scrolling implementation and they
dissolved in time according to their arrival.

Now, the notifications all cluster in the exact same region.

For example, in GWibber, you had a visual hierarchy of events based on
time.  Now we have a cluster of notifications that seem forced into a
slim time frame.

As I can see it, with the new implementation we lose:

1) Proximity.  The general location of most messaging applications
happens in the upper right corner.  Notifications straying from this
lose their visual relationship.  [1]

2) Hierarchy.  The visual hierarchy present in the original model
represented a visual relationship to time.  Removing this behaviour
requires one to be focused on the event to understand the relationship
to time.  [2]

3) Aesthetic-Usability Effect.  While arguable, it does seem that there
is at least some evidence the new placement has adversely affects the
aesthetics of the desktop with regards to a westernized learned
response.  "Aesthetic designs are more effective at fostering positive
attitudes than unaesthetic designs, and make people more tolerant of
design problems." [3]

4) Scannability of Content.  Notifications primarily consist of readable
content.  For example, within Gwibber, some content is relevant to the
audience, some is not.  Forcing overlapping information eliminates
scannability. [4]

In closing, while do gain a degree of consistency with the new
implementation.  Clearly the reasoning for the positioning is not
entirely understandable or easily discoverable [For example, see comment
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/notify-
osd/+bug/438536/comments/87], one could argue that the consistency is
lost on the audience with the degree of aesthetic inconsistency.

The second argument that we create a logical division of events based on
location, one could also argue based on the feedback in this report, is
also either not apparent or entirely lost on the end audience member.

Unfortunately we have no explicitly stated audience for this design, so
arriving at an effective solution is nigh on impossible. If we make an
audience a power user that frequently is needing to hit window
decoration buttons (again assuming top right orientation) and entering
search bars in Firefox, then the current path has merit.  If the
audience is a slightly more casual individual, the decision might seem
out of place aesthetically and subject to a different set of design
concepts.

Alternatively, we could simply close this bug based on the fact that the
fellow footing the bill has made a concrete design decision. :)

[1] PG 160 of Universal Principles of Design [ISBN 1-59253-007-9]
[2] PG 104 of Universal Principles of Design [ISBN 1-59253-007-9]
[3] PG 18 of Universal Principles of Design [ISBN 1-59253-007-9]
[4] http://www.useit.com/alertbox/whyscanning.html

-- 
Notifications should show up closer to top right
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/438536
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