@fubarbundy

Absolutely correct on all points. Even if this is a design decision, not
providing any way to return to the standard behavior is not only
frustrating, but lacking the spirit of the Linux and Ubuntu projects.

I don't think I've ever been more worried about the future of Ubuntu
then I have at this point in its development. While the underlying OS is
still a strong community effort that has produced something vastly
superior to its competition, the same is not true of the GUI. A small
group has decided that their ideas for innovation are the correct ones,
and the community that maintains and refines the underlying OS via bug
reports like these are at their whim when it comes to design.

This bug is a perfect example of this overarching issue. This "fix" is
specifically targeted at Lucid, specifically because the new behavior
makes the default Ambiance theme make slightly more sense. While in that
I agree it's is a fix, the entire window design itself requires us to
throw out Fitts's law and numerous other time and scientifically tested
GUI standards. The only rationale for the changes made in relation to
Ambiance have been that they will make room for "innovations" that have
yet to materialize. We're losing usability in our current releases for
the sake of a promise for yet more widgets in Maverick. (The future is
not more window chrome! It's none at all, which is the irony of the
Chrome browser's name. While I think client side window decorations and
windicators could be an improvement, they're not innovation. And if
Canonical's got some grand scheme to innovate past the completion, not
only would I be surprised, but I'd be angered by their decision to
gradually hinder usability on the way there.)

This is not a bug. This is an infestation.

I'm beginning to realize the problem could possibly be systemic to the
structure of Ubuntu's development. I've heard it said that bug reports
like these are not the place to hash out GUI decisions, and that's
probably correct. The problem is there's no open forum to debating these
decisions. A faulty feature is easily fixed with a bug report on
Launchpad, but that's because there's little debate involved in whether
or not a program has crashed.

I feel that the discussion on this report (as well as the thread that
linked me to it:
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1450784&highlight=window+controls+-at+top+corner&page=3)
is enlightening, and offers a detailed glimpse into the vast difference
between design and development. Unfortunately, as of yet there's no real
place for design to be talked about across the community, and based on
the control Canonical has taken over the OS design, I'm beginning to
doubt there ever will be.

/rant. About the bug, a gconf setting would be a real fix.

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Window close button is clickable anywhere in the corner
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/558327
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