I work with 70 + yr olds almost on a daily basis and I have enough trouble
explaining alt+tab to begin with ;) I do think it would be pretty simple.
"to see all of your applications you have open and switch between them press
alt + tab".

I actually think that introducing people to alt tab as it is is difficult.
"press alt, then tab but don't let go of alt and then you can continue to
press tab until you get to the application you would like. Or press alt, tab
and while holding down alt  click on the application you want to go to"

With my idea it is both snappy for users that are used to it and simple for
those to figure out who are intermediate/power users. We could even have a
little question mark at the bottom right that would give quick tips.

Honestly we are already doing something different with the parent/child
elements in it and I think that my proposal is a great addon to the parent
child alt+tab.

If we are needing to explain how things work for 70 year olds we should look
at gnome zeitgeist (gnome activity journal).

On a personal note I think we should do something different and innovative
with alt+tab.

To go along with the comment about small preview windows why don't we do a
mouse-over/tab-over magnification like OSX launcher?

-Richard

On Sat, Mar 20, 2010 at 2:43 PM, Gregory Petrosyan <
[email protected]> wrote:

> On Sat, Mar 20, 2010 at 11:15 PM, Richard S <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Personally I like the nested alt tab that gnome. I think that the
> interface
> > should be a modal that semi-requires further input. This would allow a
> user
> > better application navigation and management.
> >
> > Example of better functionality:
> >
> > If alt+tab press lasts less than X amount of time, switch to previous
> > application.
> >
> > If alt+tab lasts longer than X then the menu stays up and tab key goes
> > horizontally through the menu and alt key go vertically. Space or enter
> will
> > choose current app. (arrow keys could be used as well)
> >
> > Mouse would still be able to navigate through the menu. Hovering over a
> > parent item will show children. Hovering over child will bring a preview
> of
> > the window to the center of the display to and make alt tab interface
> semi
> > transparent.
> >
> > Right click on parent to allow for functions(open new window, close all
> > windows, move to workspace X, etc)
> >
> > Dragging child from one divider to another would move a window to
> different
> > virtual desktop.
> >
> > It quickly could be made into quite a powerful interface.
> >
> > I'm not the best with photoshop but I could give it a shot if people
> would
> > like to see a mockup of this idea set.
> >
> > Please comment.
>
> Can you please explain, *what exactly is wrong* with windows-style
> alt-tab? Too simple? Or gnome-shell should be different just for the
> sake of being different?
>
>                Gregory
>
_______________________________________________
gnome-shell-list mailing list
[email protected]
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-shell-list

Reply via email to