I was just told about that one today.  Maybe that should go into the
FUSA as well since it contains all of the other functions?  It's still
no good to have 2 of the same icon, and keeping anything in the
notification area that isn't a notification is frowned upon.

It's applications like Pidgin that make people think that thing's a tray
when it's not.

** Description changed:

  Binary package hint: pidgin
  
  As of Intrepid, the FUSA takes care of status-changing, which was one of
  the system tray icon's two purposes.  The other purpose is to notify
  users of new messages.
  
  Currently, Pidgin defaults to "Always" show the system tray icon.
  This results in two "available", "away", etc. status icons showing up in
  the panel.  This is both redundant and confusing.  Pidgin already offers
  an option to only show the icon when notifying users of new messages.
  This should be the default to avoid duplicating functionality and
  causing confusion.
+ 
+ According to the GNOME HIG:
+ Non-core programs for which a perpetual icon may be useful must default to 
not perpetually showing the icon. Users may select to enable a perpetual icon 
for the application as a preference. 
+ 
+ Additionally, the HIG states that if it does anything other than opening
+ a window, it should be an applet, rather than showing up as if it was a
+ notification icon.
+ 
+ 
+ Citation: 
http://library.gnome.org/devel/hig-book/stable/desktop-notification-area.html.en

-- 
Pidgin should default to "Show system tray icon:  On unread messages"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/290552
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