[Bug 1861088]

2021-01-01 Thread 5-kde
In Kubuntu 20.04, I put the same panels and widgets on each monitor.

Recently, all of those panels and widgets disappeared from my external
monitor.

It would be very nice if I could clone an existing panel (along with all
the widgets on that panel) and drag that copy to the edge of my external
monitor (that lost all panels for no apparent reason). But, in KDE, each
panel has to be created from scratch and customized; you can't clone an
"already customized existing panel".

Even better, I wish I could right click on an external monitor and tell
KDE to clone all panels and widget of another monitor.

The current status of this is "CLOSED NOT A BUG". It should instead be
"Open Feature Request". Automation is the natural progression of any
project: you eliminate steps that can be performed automatically through
programming. This would be a nice feature.

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Title:
  Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

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[Bug 1861088]

2020-02-06 Thread Lonnie Lee Best
If not by default, add a feature called: "Clone Default Monitor's Panels
and Widgets to All Monitors".

If you have 3 or 4 monitors, and want to have the same panels and
widgets on all monitors, repeating the same task 3 or 4 times, for each
panel and widget, begs for automation.

At the very least, you should be able to right-click on any panel and
clone it and all of its widgets and drag it to the desired screen edge.

I wish every KDE developers had about four 4K monitors to set up on each
install. At least the guy calling the shots at KDE ought to have this
setup (not some guy with one 1080p laptop monitor). Sorry, these are my
honest thoughts; repetitive tasks beg for automation.

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Title:
  Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

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[Bug 1861088] Re: Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

2020-01-29 Thread Rik Mills
** Changed in: kubuntu-meta (Ubuntu)
   Importance: Undecided => Wishlist

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Title:
  Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

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[Bug 1861088]

2020-01-29 Thread U26
Thank you for your feedback.

Defaults are highly subjective and it is impossible to please everyone.
I'm unconvinced of the problem here. The panel is still on the other
monitor, all that is required is moving the mouse further.

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  Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

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[Bug 1861088]

2020-01-29 Thread U26
Just to clarify, I meant you move the mouse to the other monitor and
click on the panel. Not some gesture.

The rest of your argument about reducing the number of steps is all
based around the notion that people want two panels with two monitors.
Otherwise this whole burden of steps works the other way round.

Given I see screenshots on bug reports on a daily basis, I do have an
idea of what is popular. For more empirical evidence panel count and
screen count are something we are collecting in the new user feedback
module.

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  Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

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[Bug 1861088] Re: Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

2020-01-29 Thread Bug Watch Updater
** Changed in: kdelibs
   Status: New => Invalid

** Changed in: kdelibs
   Importance: Medium => Wishlist

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[Bug 1861088]

2020-01-29 Thread Lonnie Lee Best
"all that is required is moving the mouse further" -  David Edmundson

Respectfully, here me out.

As a new user of KDE, I have no clue what that means (above). Is there
some implicitly hidden gesture that produces the Application Menu on
Additional Monitors? If so, why is this gesture not required on the
default monitor? That's an inconsistency guaranteed to confuse a new
users of KDE (like myself).

Closing this ticket on the grounds that "defaults are subjective"
ignores the fact that "sensible default increase new user adoption".

I'm making the effort to push this point because I've just started using
KDE and I want it to become the goto desktop for all types of users.
Obviously, I can see that it is the goto desktop for power users, but if
you'd give my suggestions deeper consideration KDE will evolve into the
desktop that's preferred by power users AND new users. This can be
accomplished by making defaults explicit instead of hidden: "Show it
until they know it".

I donated $20.00 to KDE.org the other day because of the potential I see
in KDE. That doesn't make what I'm saying unquestionable, but I want you
to know my sincerity.

Here's my primary desktop history:
Windows 3.1
Windows 98
Window XP
GNOME 2 (April 2007 is when I started using Linux exclusively)
Unity 7
GNOME 3
KDE

Out of all of these GNOME 2 was the easiest to use as a new user, but
Unity 7 had the most sensible defaults when it comes to panels in a
Multiple Monitors environment:

In Unity 7, if you installed that desktop onto a computer having
multiple monitors, each additional monitor had all the same panels as
the default monitor. In its day, Unity 7 had more users than GNOME and
KDE combined. When it came to new user adoption, they were doing
something right.

Here's why KDE should do this too by default:

1) Concept of "Burden of Configuration". The burden of configuration is
best placed on users that already have the knowledge of how to configure
KDE. New users benefit from explicit interfaces that show things (on
screen) by default. Auto-hide and gesture-driven access to menus are NOT
sensible defaults for new users. This is NOT subjective. It is a fact.
Once new users know where things are, at that point they can give more
priority to saving screen real-estate with auto-hide and learning
shortcuts such as mouse gestures and hot-keys. Those things are not
intuitive to new users. Until they know it, show it!

2) Concept of "Lowest Number of Steps Required". It requires less steps
to remove a panel than it does to 1) Learn what a panel is 2) Learn the
KDE names of each type of panel 3) Learn the KDE idiosyncrasies of new
panel creation in a multiple monitor setup (see #4 in my original post;
its a bug in and of itself).

3) Concept of "Less Steps Drive New User Adoption". In Web Marketing, it
is a known fact that you lose sales for each additional step that's
required to purchase your product online. Example, if it requires one
step maybe 20% of the people that see it will buy it. If it requires 2
steps: only 15% will buy it. 3 steps 7% will buy it. Amazon.com knows
this, and that's why they created the feature (one click purchasing).
The point is, with each additional set required, you lose people.

The same is probably true for New User adoption of a desktop
environments. How many people have run into the problem I'm reporting
here, and decided to put no effort into trying to change it? How many
people evaluate KDE and after not seeing an application menu on an
additional monitor, just assume wrongly that KDE is inadequate and quit
evaluating it?. How many people get to step 1 (of learning about panels)
and then give up. How many people add a panel, and give up because they
don't want to take the next step to configure it to their liking. Each
additional step a new user has to endure could be the step they give up
on.

Give the new user everything on all monitors by default and I promise
you it will benefit new user adoption. I can't prove it, but I
intelligible know it (based on the concepts above).

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Title:
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[Bug 1861088] Re: Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

2020-01-28 Thread Bug Watch Updater
Launchpad has imported 2 comments from the remote bug at
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=416852.

If you reply to an imported comment from within Launchpad, your comment
will be sent to the remote bug automatically. Read more about
Launchpad's inter-bugtracker facilities at
https://help.launchpad.net/InterBugTracking.


On 2020-01-28T09:58:23+00:00 Lonnie Lee Best wrote:

Currently, when you install Kubuntu 19.10 onto a computer that has
multiple monitors, KDE only puts panels onto the default monitor and the
user has to add panels to all additional monitors.

I want to make my case that this should NOT be the default practice.

I think all panels, that are visible in a one-monitor setup, should also
be on each and every additional monitor until they are decidedly remove.
I'll make my case with the "Application Menu Panel" alone, but I have
the same opinion for all other panels.

Because KDE doesn't put an Application Menu Panel onto each monitor, the
new KDE user will not know how to access an Application's main menu if
they have the window open on one of the additional monitors. For new
users of KDE, like myself, it is very clear that the burden of
customization should be on the advanced user and not the new user. The
advanced KDE user will know instantly how to remove an unwanted panel,
but the new user is burdened with a task that is way more difficult than
removing an unwanted panel: learning what panels are, learning the names
of each type of panel, dealing with bad panel creation workflow
(explained below in #4).

Please let me help you see this from the eyes of a new user who has an
application open on one of the additional monitors in a multi-monitor
setup.

1) First I looked at the top of the application window and didn't see
the application's main menu where I'd expected it to be (either in that
window's title bar, or at the top of the entire monitor's screen).

2) I hit the alt-key (a common MS shortcut), hoping that the
Application's main menu was just hidden and that alt would bring it up.

3) I had to do an internet search and learn about panels in KDE and then
proceed to create my first panel.

4) When I right-clicked on the additional monitor's desktop and selected
Panel > Application Menu, nothing happened on the vary monitor I did
this on, instead (outside of my eye's focus) it added an additional
Application Menu panel to the default monitor (which already has an
Application Menu Panel), and worse: it added it on top of the existing
Application Menu panel that was already on that monitor (making it
practically invisible that anything had occurred)!

Now, I ask you this. Is this the type of user experience that produces
new user adoption?

Wouldn't it be better to put all the panels, that are on the default
monitor, onto each and every additional monitor by default? Put the
burden of customization onto the advanced user (the one who already know
how to do it). After all, the burden of removing a panel is easier that
creating and customizing a new one from scratch (especially for a new
user who doesn't even know what a "panel" is). You don't need to put
this burden onto the new user who can't access the main menu of an
application their using because it is simply open within and additional
monitor.

Who on the KDE development team thinks this is an acceptable default
behavior (to not make the "main menu of an application" accessible until
you create and customize a panel onto that monitor)?

I love that KDE is so customizable, but you guys need to couple that
richness with sensible defaults and this is an area that is not sensible
(to the new user)!

ProblemType: Bug
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 19.10
Package: kubuntu-desktop 1.387
ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 5.3.0-29.31-generic 5.3.13
Uname: Linux 5.3.0-29-generic x86_64
NonfreeKernelModules: nvidia_modeset nvidia
ApportVersion: 2.20.11-0ubuntu8.2
Architecture: amd64
CurrentDesktop: KDE
Date: Tue Jan 28 03:13:51 2020
InstallationDate: Installed on 2020-01-27 (1 days ago)
InstallationMedia: Kubuntu 19.10 "Eoan Ermine" - Release amd64 (20191017)
ProcEnviron:
 TERM=xterm-256color
 PATH=(custom, no user)
 XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=
 LANG=en_US.UTF-8
 SHELL=/bin/bash
SourcePackage: kubuntu-meta
UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install)

Downstream Report:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/kubuntu-meta/+bug/1861088

Reply at: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/kubuntu-
meta/+bug/1861088/comments/2


On 2020-01-28T10:08:03+00:00 Lonnie Lee Best wrote:

https://askubuntu.com/questions/1206280/kde-show-app-menus-on-all-
displays

Reply at: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/kubuntu-
meta/+bug/1861088/comments/3


** Changed in: kdelibs
   Status: Unknown => New

** Changed in: kdelibs
   Importance: Unknown => Medium

-

[Bug 1861088] Re: Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

2020-01-28 Thread Lonnie Lee Best
** Bug watch added: KDE Bug Tracking System #416852
   https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=416852

** Also affects: kdelibs via
   https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=416852
   Importance: Unknown
   Status: Unknown

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Title:
  Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

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[Bug 1861088] [NEW] Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

2020-01-28 Thread Lonnie Lee Best
Public bug reported:

Currently, when you install Kubuntu 19.10 onto a computer that has
multiple monitors, KDE only puts panels onto the default monitor and the
user has to add panels to all additional monitors.

I want to make my case that this should NOT be the default practice.

I think all panels, that are visible in a one-monitor setup, should also
be on each additional monitor until they are decidedly remove. I'll make
my case with the "Application Menu Panel", but I have the same opinion
for all other panels.

Because KDE doesn't put an Application Menu Panel onto each monitor, the
new KDE user will not know how to access an Application's main menu if
they have the window open on one of the additional monitors. For new
users of KDE, like myself, it is very clear that the burden of
customization should be on the advanced user and not the new user. The
advanced KDE user will know instantly how to remove an unwanted panel,
but the new user is burdened with a task that is way more difficult than
removing an unwanted panel:

Please let me help you see this from the eyes of a new user who has an
application open on one of the additional monitors.

1) First I looked at the top of the application window and didn't see
the application's main menu where I expected it to be (either in that
window's title bar, or at the top of the entire monitor window).

2) I hit the alt-key (a common MS shortcut), hoping that the
Application's main menu was just hidden and that alt would bring it up.

3) I had to do an internet search and learn about panels in KDE and then
proceed to create my first panel.

4) When I right-clicked on the additional monitor's desktop and selected
Panel > Application Menu, nothing happened on the vary monitor I did
this on, instead it added an additional Application Menu panel to the
default monitor, and worse: it added it on top of the existing
Application Menu that was already on that monitor (making it practically
invisible that anything had occurred).

Now, I ask you this. Is this the type of user experience that produces
new user adoption?

Wouldn't it be better to put all the panels, that are on the default
monitor, onto each and every additional monitor by default? Put the
burden of customization onto the advanced user. After all, the burden of
removing a panel is easier that creating and customizing a new one from
scratch AND the advance user will already know all about panels. You
don't need to put the burden onto the new user who can't access the main
menu of an application their using because it is open within and
additional monitor.

Who on the KDE development team thinks this is an acceptable default
behavior (to not make Application Menus of an application accessible
until you create and customize a panel onto that monitor)?

I love the KDE is so customizable, but you guys need to couple that
richness with sensible defaults and this is an area that is not sensible
(to the new user)!

ProblemType: Bug
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 19.10
Package: kubuntu-desktop 1.387
ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 5.3.0-29.31-generic 5.3.13
Uname: Linux 5.3.0-29-generic x86_64
NonfreeKernelModules: nvidia_modeset nvidia
ApportVersion: 2.20.11-0ubuntu8.2
Architecture: amd64
CurrentDesktop: KDE
Date: Tue Jan 28 03:13:51 2020
InstallationDate: Installed on 2020-01-27 (1 days ago)
InstallationMedia: Kubuntu 19.10 "Eoan Ermine" - Release amd64 (20191017)
ProcEnviron:
 TERM=xterm-256color
 PATH=(custom, no user)
 XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=
 LANG=en_US.UTF-8
 SHELL=/bin/bash
SourcePackage: kubuntu-meta
UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install)

** Affects: kubuntu-meta (Ubuntu)
 Importance: Undecided
 Status: New


** Tags: amd64 apport-bug eoan third-party-packages

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Title:
  Include Default Panels on All Monitors By Default

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