Re: a dream

2012-01-29 Thread Luke Yelavich
On Sun, Jan 29, 2012 at 07:57:33AM EST, Pedro Bessa wrote:
 steps to reproduce
 1. not all keyboards have a Super key, so using a keyboard that has
 no Super key, hit Super

For keyboards that don't have a super key, pressing Alt + F1 then enter will 
load the dash, since the dash is the first icon on the launcher.

Luke

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Re: a dream

2012-01-28 Thread Alex Schoof
The super key already opens the dash. Hit super. Then type sett. Then down.
Then enter.

Hold control and press s to save.

-- Alex
On Jan 28, 2012 2:16 PM, Pedro Bessa pedbe...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Ubuntu team and community,

 we have to make using the keyboard a pleasing experience.

 I thought about creating a shortcut for Dash, for Ubuntu Software Store,
 for System Settings, but I quickly run into conflicts. If CTRL+S is save,
 what is System Settings? So we have to go like the emacs way, but better.

 We hit ctrl once, but we don't hold ctrl, because that toggles on keyboard
 shortcut mode.

 Calm down! When we hit s, we see save. When we hit c, we see copy. When we
 hit f, we see find. It's all there, the old shortcuts.

 Going back, we hit ctrl once, then we type Ubu, then see what we're
 typing, then see Ubuntu One and Ubuntu Software Center, then hit down, then
 Ubuntu Software Center is selected, then hit enter, then Ubuntu opens
 Ubuntu Software Center for us.

 That's very expressive, so that is very good, because we need to express
 intent.

 What do you say?

 Best regards,
 Pedro Bessa

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Re: a dream

2012-01-28 Thread Pedro Bessa

steps to reproduce
1. not all keyboards have a Super key, so using a keyboard that has no 
Super key, hit Super

expected result:
ubuntu is inclusive, so I can access Super
actual result:
ubuntu isn't inclusive, so I can't access Super

I created an add-on for Firefox called Ubiquity in Awesomebar.
Somebody asked for Ubiquity in Awesomebar.
Somebody else said that Ubiquity isn't like Linux, because Linux 
commands are cryptic and Ubiquity is expressive.


https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/ubiquity-in-awesomebar/
http://getsatisfaction.com/mozilla/topics/make_ubiquity_the_address_bar

I was going the emacs and vim way...
but we're making ubuntu for the masses...
so I noticed that we should go the ubiquity way...

hit Ctrl once, Dash opens, type S, see Save, discover ShotWell,
but Save is already selected, because we already decided that Save is 
the default match for S,

hit enter, saves

hit Ctrl once, Dash opens, type C, see Copy, discover Compiz Config,
but Copy is already selected, because we already decided that Copy is 
the default match for C,

hit enter, copies

hit Ctrl once, Dash opens, type F, see Find, discover Firefox,
but Find is already selected, because we already decided that Find is 
the default match for F,

hit enter, finds

What do you say?

Best regards,
Pedro Bessa

On 28-01-2012 17:23, Alex Schoof wrote:


The super key already opens the dash. Hit super. Then type sett. Then 
down. Then enter.


Hold control and press s to save.

-- Alex

On Jan 28, 2012 2:16 PM, Pedro Bessa pedbe...@gmail.com 
mailto:pedbe...@gmail.com wrote:


Hi Ubuntu team and community,

we have to make using the keyboard a pleasing experience.

I thought about creating a shortcut for Dash, for Ubuntu Software
Store, for System Settings, but I quickly run into conflicts. If
CTRL+S is save, what is System Settings? So we have to go like the
emacs way, but better.

We hit ctrl once, but we don't hold ctrl, because that toggles on
keyboard shortcut mode.

Calm down! When we hit s, we see save. When we hit c, we see copy.
When we hit f, we see find. It's all there, the old shortcuts.

Going back, we hit ctrl once, then we type Ubu, then see what
we're typing, then see Ubuntu One and Ubuntu Software Center, then
hit down, then Ubuntu Software Center is selected, then hit enter,
then Ubuntu opens Ubuntu Software Center for us.

That's very expressive, so that is very good, because we need to
express intent.

What do you say?

Best regards,
Pedro Bessa

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