On Jul 21, 2007, at 8:27 PM, Christoph Mueller wrote: > ... > The deskbar is only a searcher and starter for different things like > address book, applications, bookmarks or internet search. > > But the address bar would also be a starter, but the url to an > application or dialog is present every time the application or dialog > has focus. The url shows the state of the application. Like in a web > application. The url represents the address to that application or > function of that application. So users can do the same things they can > do with urls in web applications. Send via email or bookmark it.
For that to work in any application that deals with documents, the URL would have to contain URL-encoded copies of all the documents you had open -- along with URL-encoded copies of their undo history (if that wasn't stored in the documents already), their clipboard contents, and all current preferences settings. That would make it rather long. Even in Web applications, a URL often does not represent the current state of the application. > If the user often writes an email to someone, it would be a great idea > to have a shortcut somewhere on which he can click. Probably this can > be done with Evolution and some cryptic command line parameters. But > the average user does not know how to use it. But if the user writes > an email in Evolution the normal way, and the address bar represents > the > state of the "new mail" window, while he writes the mail, like > system://evolution/[EMAIL PROTECTED]&subject=test, the > application signals the user, that he can copy the address, execute > it, and have the same new mail again. Or he can bookmark it and also > send it via email to a friend. > ... That's an interesting idea, but I think you are vastly overestimating the proportion of people who pay attention to URLs at all. The prevalence of phishing shows how often they are ignored even in Web browsers. Having screen real estate taken up by such an obscure function regardless of *what* program you were using would be excessive. For the example you cite, it would make more sense for the e-mail composition window to have a proxy icon, in its title bar, that you could drag to a folder as a template. Cheers -- Matthew Paul Thomas http://mpt.net.nz/ _______________________________________________ Usability mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/usability
