Just installed the patched Notify OSD to get around the lack of options
in the "official" build.

I'm very concerned about a noticeable trend in recent releases of
Ubuntu.  It seems highly impactful design decisions are being made that
are contrary to the philosophies of open source software.

I have used Ubuntu for years and been extremely happy with it until
recently.  There were a number of occasions that made me consider
switching away:

 - when I realised that the Volume and 'Me Menu' shared the same icon group and 
could not be removed independently;
 - when I realised how utterly useless the Me Menu actually was;
 - when I realised that bad design decisions were being made centrally against 
all consensus (the left-aligned window buttons);

The Notify OSD issue is another decision that has no design merit and
only serves to distance experienced developers.

These are all starting to make me feel that the direction that Ubuntu is
taking is no longer for me.

Design Guidelines should be just that - guidelines, not strict rules.
Guidelines can be interpreted to ensure that developers can create
exciting new software whilst sticking to the ethos of the guidelines.
To actively deny the ability of developers and designers to interpret
guidelines by removing functionality (that's what this is) is a Closed
ethos.

Distrowatch, here I come.

Kevin

-- 
notify-send ignores the expire timeout parameter
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/390508
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