Hi Máirín,

Thanks for the link to the user base, that's actually new to me (or I've forgotten about it) - a good resource.

I don't see any specific info that would help answer some of the questions we've uncovered in this discussion. It would be great if we could reach out to Fedora users to answer questions such as:

1 - How many operating systems do you typically have installed on your main machine?

2 - How often do you use the ability to boot your machine into older kernels? Other OSs?

3 - What causes you to boot into old kernels?

4 - How often do you select something other than the default in the boot menu (i.e. grub2)


The questions might need some polishing, but those are the ones I can pick off the top of my head. A quick survey might get some valuable data here.

I'm not sure if there is an actual project waiting for our input here or if we're just discussing things, so maybe we have some time to collect some data?

I like the idea of relating the old kernels with the rescue concept. I suspect you're right that most users don't use old kernels (is there an auto-prune for this, like keep the last 3 kernels only?). They probably only access those when something goes wrong with the latest kernel, like in a rescue situation. I've had to access old kernels myself and I'm certainly no developer, so the use case exists (I can't be the only one!?)

I guess the core of my concern is that we are cleaning up clutter for users who don't mind the clutter, or actually want the clutter. I want to avoid designing for ourselves by focusing on our actual user's needs and tasks. Maybe I just lacked the knowledge about the user research that has gone on prior to this discussion.

What are your thoughts on the need to collect some data from Fedora users via a survey? Useful or redundant?

Thanks,

Kirk



On 06/20/2012 07:30 PM, Máirín Duffy wrote:
Hi Kirk,

On 2012-06-20 19:04, Kirk Bridger wrote:
 1 - I think data should be collected before we make assumptions about
our user base.

We need to take the user base as defined by the project board as a given:

https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/User_base

It wasn't determined lightly and it was researched and deliberated and discussed throughout the community pretty carefully.

 2 - I think categorizing is a better solution than hiding, as users
with lots of kernels/OSs are more likely to be switching more often,
vs users with just a few.  The value of reducing clutter is minimized
is clutter consists of 3-5 items, and hiding things makes it harder to
do what you want to do.

Don't forget to consider, along with majority of users vs minority of users, how frequently vs infrequently users will be:

- Switching OSes
- Switching kernels

I believe switching OSes is going to be more frequent for even the Pokemon 'gotta catch 'em all' distro enthusiast than switching kernels within each OS, and the mockup that Martin put together definitely optimizes for switching OSes instead of switching kernels. The only user I know of that realistically switches between specific kernels on any kind of frequent basis is a kernel developer, and I haven't seen any complaints or concerns from kernel developers about the change. That being said, I can certainly reach out to a few and get some feedback from them, but I think they probably - since their menu has so many entries anyway - have highly customized grub conf files anyway so any defaults are likely not to affect them.

 3 - I think removing clutter is a good goal, provided it meets our
users needs (see comment #1)

+99 I'm glad we seem to be all on the same page about this part, we just need to sort out more of the other details.

~m
_______________________________________________
design-team mailing list
design-team@lists.fedoraproject.org
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/design-team
_______________________________________________
design-team mailing list
design-team@lists.fedoraproject.org
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/design-team

Reply via email to