It seems to me a big problem with the Activities Overview is that it can
easily become extremely cluttered, especially, but not just, for a "power
user" (I'm reluctant to use that term as I'm not really sure what it means).
 Seeing a list of running and none-running application icons, as well as a
list of places, as well as a list of recent files, as well as a thumbnail of
every open window on every workspace - there's just too much going on there
for my brain to comfortably (that's the important word) be aware of.

I think a solution to this would be to only show the
currently relevant activities, i.e. those on the current workspace.  I know,
I know, the goal of Shell isn't to be workspace driven, but for
single-workspace users this would make no difference, they wouldn't have had
such clutter to start with, and for multiple-workspace users this would
reduce clutter quite a lot, and make switching windows with the Activities
Overview *somewhat* less painful*.  You could stick a button on the right
screen edge, and also make the whole edge hot, to bring up all workspaces,
or just the New Workspace button if there are no other workspaces.

* it's still painful because it's a context change and there's still lots of
clutter from stuff unrelated to window switching, but that's a different
discussion, and I think the solution to that would be to move window
selection out of the Activities Overview, perhaps with my preference, the
much argued over always visible window** list, or perhaps with a
mouse-driven version of alt-tab (but window based, not app based**), or with
a Compiz Scale function for the current workspace, but you'd need a mousey
way to activate it

** again, window based - I still don't see why people want to focus on
applications, which are a means to an end, rather than on windows, which
usually represent a document or some other /thing/ that the user cares
about.  Think of a mechanic lying under a car.  He puts down one tool, maybe
a spanner, and picks up another, maybe a screwdriver.  You don't force him
to line up all his wrenches, including the one he left next to another car,
and chose one of them, you give him the one relating to the car he's working
on.  In computer terms, if I'm working on using data in one spreadsheet to
write a paragraph in one text document, why on earth do you want to provide
me with every other spreadsheet and word document I might have open for
completely unrelated purposes just when I want to switch between the two
things that relate to what I'm doing?

-- 
Sam Illingworth
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