On Mon, 2019-03-25 at 10:21 -0400, Pat Suwalski wrote: > > [...] > Is that a joke? On a default gnome install on any modern screen, > only about 25% of the top bar contains any information at all. It > can't be "the most important real estate" and be so underutilized.
It really can. One stated goal for GNOME 3 was to provide a distraction free environment to work in. If you expose too much information you'll add distraction while diluting the information actually provided. > That said, notification icons are literally the most useful > information points for the many applications I have running in the > background. So they deserve prominent placement. This is rather anecdotal and hard (for the GNOME developers) to act on. It would be more interesting to know what problems you have with the current notification system. > You think "application developers simply cannot live without their > application icons being visible at all times"? That's why Windows > lets you hide them. Problem solved. Like, since XP in 2001. I think what they did to the notification bar in Windows XP is pretty weak to be honest. Closer to worst-of-both-worlds than to a solution in my perspective. Regards, Mattias _______________________________________________ desktop-devel-list mailing list desktop-devel-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list