(I told myself I wasn't going to participate in this thread. Oh well) John,
Absolutely. A first time users should get at least something that says "Desktop Tour" and "FAQ" or something. Documentation has been flagging problem in GNOME and we really need to actually at some point to complete the polish finish off the documentation. The stuff you've been doing with DBus is a great example of making sure documentation is an important part of a product. Also, it seems like we have a chance to do some innovation here with regards to spatial. I mean it is an interesting interaction design problem, right? Has anybody who is at a university tried to talk to human interface design experts/profs on what might be a good way to re-design this? Why not have a group split off and try to solve the "too many windows problem"? Or maybe advertise to universities on what might be a great master's thesis. sri On Fri, Dec 23, 2005 at 01:10:01PM -0500, John (J5) Palmieri wrote: > On Thu, 2005-12-22 at 14:59 +0100, Luca Ferretti wrote: > > > * We don't have any "Introduction to GNOME" manual that could > > explain you how the spatial really works (middle click to > > open-and-close, use list view to "browse" descendants...). So > > the spatial UI is a mess for new and no-nautilus-fan users: "I > > can't manage all that windows on my screen!!" > > You hit on the biggest problem and a possible solution here. > Documentation!!! That by far would be better than throwing options in a > user's face. Perhaps a web site that users are directed to, having tips > & tricks on customizing the Gnome desktop. > > -- > John (J5) Palmieri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > _______________________________________________ > desktop-devel-list mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list -- _______________________________________________ desktop-devel-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list
