Not applications, issues.
My point is that user experience issues gets a lower severity than they should.
Let's take photoshop CS 4 with two old but relevant actual issues as an 
example. 
1. There is a problem with the text tool functionality, it did not work. 
Everything else works, though.
2. There are serious graphics problems, huge artifacts, the entire application 
is almost unworkable under Gnome.

With the current severity levels(without common sense), example 1 gets higher 
priority, which I think is wrong.

//Nicklas

PS.
Yes I know the actual issue turned out to be a configuration thing. But that's 
not the point.
DS.

-----Original Message-----
From: Austin English [mailto:austinengl...@gmail.com]
Sent: Sat 2009-05-02 20:56
To: Nicklas Börjesson
Cc: wine-devel@winehq.org
Subject: Re: Severity levels
 
2009/5/2 Nicklas Börjesson <nicklas.borjes...@ws.se>:
>>Wine is meant to support _ALL_ windows applications. It doesn't give
>>priority to 'server' or 'desktop' applications (there is no
>>difference, really), but instead tries to make all of them work.
>
> Yes, but I wasn't talking about server applikations per se, but that the 
> severity levels would be perfect for a server application, hence skewing the 
> priorities away from GUI and other, more "soft", user experience issues.

I'm curious what non-gui applications you're talking about in regards to wine.

-- 
-Austin





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