I agree this got off track. Here's what I think:
Instead of discussing the target audience, we should keep in mind what
the usage for an application, in this case, Mousepad, is.
From my point of view, Mousepad is to provide a simple text editor to
edit some configuration files and possibly some
Geany seems to fulfill multiple editing needs for me. However, it's an easy
install - in terms of default mousepad or leafpad do the job just fine.
Just my 2 cents...
Regarding the Xubuntu strategy, please allow me to add a voice and a few
thoughts but first let me thank you for all your hard
+1
Mousepad is perfectly suitable for basic tasks that users will have.
Some performance edge cases for mousepad is worrisome (such as a
minified JS file with syntax highlighting on will cause issues), but
that is largely just nitpick.
One problem potentially with mousepad is that the
On 07/11/13 17:02, legacy daily wrote:
Geany seems to fulfill multiple editing needs for me. However, it's an
easy install - in terms of default mousepad or leafpad do the job just
fine. Just my 2 cents...
Regarding the Xubuntu strategy, please allow me to add a voice and a
few thoughts but
For what it's worth, I completely agree
on the editor.
I would think, if a user needs more capability it's highly likely
that he/she knows how to get it and has a personal preference
anyway. For out-of-the-box use Mousepad with the described new
features
Hello all. I really need another set of eyes on this. If somebody else could
please attempt verification that would be great.
Stephen Michael Kellat
Begin forwarded message:
Date: Thu, 07 Nov 2013 20:02:10 -
From: Brian Murray br...@ubuntu.com
To: skel...@fastmail.net
Subject: [Bug
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 7:42 AM, Pasi Lallinaho p...@shimmerproject.org wrote:
1. Would you find it appropriate to include a stronger mention of privacy
and user's rights - diverging from where I see Ubuntu going? I mean
protecting users from unwanted searches and unrequested Amazon suggestions