In that case, a per application micro-management as proposed in this discusion is too cumbersome.
A viable implementation for this "priorities" concept would be to provide a list of priorized categories (pre-populated with categories for the most common usage cases), allowing the association of each application to one of the categories. - Several priorization profiles could be saved, - changing between one scenario could be done instantly by loading a different created profile, - and creating a new scenario would consist of reordering the categories. 2008/12/3 Pedro Maurício Costa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > I don't want to miss a line of dialog in a movie just because a new > > mail arrives. > > > > Diego, that's exactly what I'm talking about: for you it doesn't make > sense that a movie sound is interrupted by an incoming e-mail alert, > so why should it, right? A movie/music is ranked higher than e-mail > alerts or IM invitations for you. What if it was someone calling you, > maybe you would like to see it right away. It's something hard to > manage I guess, specially if you don't want to come up with a super > hard way to configure this "sound prioritization". >
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