Hi Mark Curtis.

I'm no Gnome developer and have no affiliation with the project other than
that I on occasion submit bug-reports or translations and that I'm
interested in design.


>
>
Keeping the same look of the button but with a completely different action
> is confusing to first time users.
>

>
The minimize button does not do a completely different action in the
Gnome-Shell compared to other environments. It does what it's always done,
make the window go away. Even though the window in it's minimized state is
handled differently than in other environments and that the minimization
animation is different than in other environments, the button is pushed for
the same reason as in any other environment. As of such it would simply be
confusing for the user to change the icon.

Similarities can be drawn between minimizing and saving a document in your
favorite Office suit. The icon that represents saving has for a very long
time been that of a floppy. Even though we do no longer save to floppy-disks
but rather to harddrives or a web server, the icon has stayed the same
because it represents saving. The same thing goes for minimizing. Even
though in Gnome-Shell windows aren't minimized to a taskbar but rather to
the activities overview, they are still minimized and the small taskbar in
the icon represents that in the mind of the user.

-- 
www.twitter.com/Rovanion
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