mac_v: A notification that a window has popped up? You mean something
like this screenshot? That's how Mac OS 9 did it a decade ago. Its main
problem was that there was no direct way to get from the notification to
the actual window, violating the principle of direct manipulation; and
the same would be true of a Notify OSD bubble. That's why we say
notification bubbles should be primarily for notifications that *don't*
need an input response (with IMs skating on the edge of that category,
because seeing an IM in a notification bubble sometimes makes it
unnecessary to switch to the chat window). Now, how to present windows
requesting attention when the window list isn't visible is an important
issue, not just for updates but generally. The same is true for how to
indicate windows that are minimized. If you have ideas about how to do
those things, we'd be interested to read them on the Ayatana mailing
list. That this bug report is filed under NULL doesn't mean anything
like what you seem to think it does; this issue was recorded as needing
an item in the Ubuntu release notes, that was done, and the people
maintaining the release notes then had no interest in being spammed with
further comments irrelevant to them, so they refiled it.

Chauncellor: That Mark has commented here several times is actually an
unusually large involvement on his part for an issue that is tiny in the
grand scheme of things. With some worthy exceptions (e.g. mac_v, Peter
Whittaker, and George Dhoore), the comments in this bug report have
largely repeated points made in the mailing list discussion, which he
also saw.

puntarenas: That live.gnome.org page describes one possible design for
Gnome 3, generated in an October 2008 brainstorming session before
Notify OSD was even announced. It does not necessarily reflect the final
design for Gnome 3, Ubuntu, or anything else.

Vincenzo Canza: Sorry, I hadn't seen that question before, and I don't
understand why you're special-casing "the default intrepid desktop".
I've already given part of the answer in
<https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-
devel/2009-February/027568.html> ("Until now, Ubuntu has often used
persistent interactive notification bubbles for these kinds of
things..."). The rest of the answer is that Ubuntu isn't yet
sophisticated enough to handle some of those cases. For example, when a
hard disk starts failing, 8.10 did not (and 9.04 probably doesn't) open
a window unprompted warning of this; instead, ironically, it opened an
indefinite series of Nautilus windows unprompted.
<http://ask.metafilter.com/118440/Why-does-my-File-Browser-keep-opening>
On the Ctrl+Alt+Backspace issue, I am not remotely suggesting that forum
users are "stupid". It was perfectly understandable and predictable that
they would vastly overestimate the proportion of potential Ubuntu users
for whom that key combo is more useful than harmful. That was my point:
they're not a representative sample of users.

mb_webguy: It may be possible to provide a notification without
interruption that is effective for most potential Ubuntu users, but I
don't know what it would look like. For example, I'm at a loss to
understand why you think a notification bubble "timed to appear
periodically" above everything else would be less annoying than a window
that opens once and then sits in the background until you deal with it.
(And as I have explained previously, that the window belongs to "an
application" is irrelevant.
<https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+bug/332945/comments/127>) I welcome other
ideas, though.

getut: It is not true that "Users have no choice with the Ubuntu
updater". Not only is its behavior configurable, but if you have used
Synaptic or apt-get or any other update mechanism since the updates
became available, Update Manager will stay away.

George Dhoore: Those are interesting and well-thought ideas, thank you.
For #1, even if we solved the learnability problem, we'd still need to
make the icon reliably noticable, and it's not clear how we'd achieve
that without being more annoying than (for example) just opening the
updates window. Consider the case where you've been putting off
installing updates for a few hours, and now Ubuntu coincidentally
detects that your hard disk is failing as well. How would you
communicate this greater urgency? I suggest exploring this idea further
with some mockups on the Ubuntu wiki, and mailing the Ayatana list about
them. For #2, it seems the biggest problem would be the amount of space
it would consume, especially on netbooks.

bdoe: If you are still having this problem, I suggest subscribing to the
<http://www.ubuntu.com/usn> feed, and then reporting a bug the next time
a package you have installed shows up there without Update Manager
opening within a day. We'd take that very seriously.

Ralph Green: Best of luck! We look forward to seeing, on the Ayatana
list, the results of your experiments.

Paulo J. S. Silva: I will be responsible for the design of the messaging
menu in Karmic, so I have a pretty good idea what the indicator-applet
is intended for. The Ayatana mailing list is at
<https://launchpad.net/~ayatana>.

** Attachment added: ""Netscape requires your attention. Please bring it to the 
front.""
   http://launchpadlibrarian.net/26324408/netscape-requires-your-attention.png

-- 
[Jaunty] Update Notifier icon would provide useful status information
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/332945
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