Privet, Dima ;) On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 02:13, Dmitrijs Ledkovs <[email protected]>wrote:
> I like the idea but I really don't want to see "Ooops, spilt it" when > I'm backing up an archive of all of my family photos. This doesn't > describe operating system as reliable nor precise to me. > ..that would be a public way of exposing design failures ;) make it a feature! > Tip of the day, similar to the ubiquity-slideshow might make sense. > Somewhere, perhaps. To overcome nonesense, let's consider making progress windows more informative. Splash screens used to show us WHAT exactly is loading/happening. That was nice to watch and it was informative, unfortunately we don't see that too often anymore.. > But I'd rather see everything so fast in ubuntu that I never need to > stare at the progressbar and not be able to something else, e.g. > software centre is non-blocking UI even when it is installing stuff > you can do other things. > People make you wait while they do stuff for you, so will computers. Greater speed, greater tasks. You will not get what you are wishing for, i'm afraid. Overall i conclude, progress windows have two main functions: 1. keep the dialog with the user alive 2. help the user understand what's going on if they could reflect that more, i would be thankful.
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