The one thing that's tricky about this is consistency. Tabs for a
multiple-document-interface is a well-established UI that virtually any user
understands when they sit down at a machine. Gimp is moving in the direction
of a tab-ui for MDI, Firefox, Chrome, and IE use tabs... gedit...
everything.

When you have a group of associated pages you want to switch back and forth
between quickly, putting them in tabs, and the tabs in a single window, is a
great way to organize your workspace. Any redesign attempt should make
keeping this strength a HUGE priority, or it risks alienating people. If
they're going to give up tabs, it's got to be for something HUGELY better,
with little or no compromise.

On Thu, Feb 4, 2010 at 17:19, Reinout van Schouwen <[email protected]>wrote:

> Hi Allan,
>
> Op donderdag 04-02-2010 om 11:08 uur [tijdzone +0000], schreef Allan
> Day:
>
> > If anyone knows of any research in this area (anything relating to
> > browser usage, tabs, history functionality, etc), it would be great to
> > add that to the wiki [1].
>
> There's something on the wiki already about research on bookmarks and
> history: http://live.gnome.org/Epiphany/BookmarksHistoryIntegration
>
> regards,
>
> --
> Reinout van Schouwen
>
> _______________________________________________
> epiphany-list mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/epiphany-list
>



-- 
Jeremy Nickurak -= Email/XMPP: [email protected] =-
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