On Jan 25, 2010, at 11:48 AM, Joe Zimmerman wrote:

> On Mon, Jan 25, 2010 at 11:41 AM, John Dong <jd...@ubuntu.com> wrote:
> > It's familiar, and when something stalls it's suddenly not familiar.
> > I don't have to care WHAT it's doing, just as long as it's doing
> > something, and telling me what it's doing.  Apple used to do this in
> > System 7 and System 8 at least by showing icons during boot,
> > signifying what part of the boot process it was currently in.
> There is no "part" of bootup progress anymore. Everything happens together in 
> parallel as long as its dependencies are met, and can be arbitrary order 
> during bootup. IO traffic in an unrelated bootup job can cause a seemingly 
> small other job to "stall".
> 
> It's not at all surprising that non-linear booted OS'es like OS X 10.4+, 
> Ubuntu with Upstart, Windows 2000+, etc do not attempt to show a linear 
> progress bar.
> 
> Why not show a panel of greyed-out icons at the bottom of the screen, one for 
> each major component, and light up each icon as the corresponding component 
> is initialized? This would reflect the correct abstraction (and if the icons 
> had captions, users would have some idea of what was wrong if the boot 
> process stalled).
> 
I agree with you, a lightup panel of Upstart jobs with status indications is a 
really good bootup visual. I'd like to see this feature implemented. Any 
volunteers? :)



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