I'm picturing a single dialog with an overview of the current values and
options to change them. The fields I've marked as buttons would have the
current value as the button text so the user only has to click the value to
change it.

Language: [English (US)] (this would be a droplist)
Location: [New York, United States] (this would be a button that opens the
map)
Keyboard: [USA] (droplist)
Partition: [Use unpartitioned space (120GB)] (button which opens advanced
partitioning dialog)
User details: [Not yet provided] (button to open dialog for full name,
username and password)
[_] Log in automatically (that's a checkbox)
[_] Encrypt home directory
Computer name: [Not yet provided] (button to open dialog)

[Quit] [Install]

Default for language is determined by what they chose after entering the CD.
Default for location can be determined by IP geolocation if they are set up
with local DHCP and have internet access.
Default for keyboard can be USA.
Default for partition can be determined based on whether another OS exists,
size of unallocated partitions and whether there are any completely empty
partitions. "Not yet provided" if the user needs to manually choose a
partition to erase.
No default for user details.
Default for log in automatically: Unchecked.
Default for encrypt home directory: Unchecked.
No default for computer name.

The button text for user details could change to something like [Fred Smith
(fredsmith)] after the user has entered their info.

This would make it faster to install as you can skip sections that already
have correct defaults. It also gives the user an immediate overview of what
needs to be configured.

And the concept of having the installer automatically determine where you
are is completely awesome. If the service is hosted by Canonical it may give
a clue as to how many installations are being done.

-Ryan

On Tue, Dec 1, 2009 at 7:13 PM, Mohammed Bassit <webceo...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Mon, 2009-11-30 at 21:54 -0400, Derek Broughton wrote:
> > James Westby wrote:
> >
> > > On Mon Nov 30 13:47:34 -0500 2009 John Moser wrote:
> > >> List some not-silly reasons.
> > >
> > > You're serious? Ok.
> > >
> > >   * Takes a long time to crack any password that's not in the
> dictionary
> > >   and
> > >     more than a few characters long.
> > >   * Rainbow tables would be too large to fit on the CD.
> >
> > Actually, that's probably the best reason right there.
> >
> > --
> > derek
> >
> >
>
> Can anyone tell me why nobody actually cares about what Conrad Knauer
> was talking about in the first place ?
>
> How in **** did a discussion about making the Ubuntu installer look
> simpler, become a debate about whether some password or network security
> mechanism (or whatever) is crackable or not ?
>
> Focus people, any real thoughts about simplifying the Installer ?
>
> For me the Ubuntu install process doesn't get any easier, but I have to
> agree that it still LOOKS (as in what you see, not what you actually
> get) a bit complicated. And I also agree that hiding some of the
> options, people usually don't change, can help.
>
> Any thoughts ?
>
>
> P.S: no rumble about cracking password or I'll send the tooth fairy to
> hunt you down :)
>
>
>
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