Le lundi 24 septembre 2007, à 17:29 -0400, Bryan Clark a écrit : > On 9/24/07, Diego Escalante Urrelo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On 9/24/07, Matthias Clasen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On 9/24/07, Vincent Untz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Calvin Gaisford and I have been discussing this a few weeks ago and > > > he'll work on getting the two merged. My preference is to use the > > > current backend code, and import the intltool UI in the clock. I > don't > > > think it will be really hard, although I don't know how much work > this > > > involves. I'm a bit unsatisfied with the UI, though, since it means > > > having a lot of information in the popup. So usability input would > be > > > great. > > I'd love to hear some feedback from others. There are some consistency > issues most people can probably spot, like the [Edit] buttons should > probably be [Edit...] since they open other windows to complete the > interaction. Things like that I believe can be done pretty quickly and > aren't worth going back and forth on a mailing list about. > > More obvious changes that are unlike other places in GNOME might warrant > some discussion. Usually GNOME applets would tend towards a hidden Right > Click menu option off the main applet and this design went with having the > Edit buttons appear inline of the interface because I believe if they are > visually less strong than the surrounding parts they provide a more > discoverable set of interactions for the interface. YMMV. This is some of > the cause I've found for people to say the UI looks busier than it has to > be. > > The [Set] button appears only on mouse rollover of the timezone areas, > normally it wouldn't be readily visible. I'm not entirely sold on this > yet, my original design had a different method but I'd like to have this > tested out before trying to make more changes. > > If you have specific areas you feel need improvement I'd be more than > willing to attempt to address them on this or another list if it's more > appropriate.
My main concern is that in this popup, you can easily have: + one calendar + one map + three timezones + 7 tasks + 3 appointments + 1 birthday In 2.20, the clock now uses expanders for tasks/appointments/birthdays, so it might mitigate the issue a bit, but I still feel this is overcrowded. Vincent -- Les gens heureux ne sont pas pressés. _______________________________________________ desktop-devel-list mailing list desktop-devel-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list