[QUOTE]
It would be helpful to know what is wrong with the current approach, which has 
changed considerably from two years ago. The default themes now have a 
_considerably large_ hotspot for resizing on all four corners of every window. 
From my perspective, this problem feels like it's solved (though there is a 
slight learning curve for those coming from Windows).

So, why is that solution insufficient?
[/QUOTE]

Hey Dylan,

I just tried using: 
 * Ubuntu 10.04
 * Theme: Ambiance
 * terminal window and nautilus window

The corner hotspots are certainly helpful, however, I wouldn't call them
"hotspots".  With the ambiance theme, it looks like they tried to make
things a little easier by increasing the BOTTOM BORDER width to ~5px(?).
This gives the illusion of a hotspot, but if you try to increase the
height of the window by using the bottom border, you'll realize that
those "hotspots" are simply a byproduct of the thicker bottom border.

As everyone has already mentioned numerous times, this bug is a terrible
UI bug.  It shouldn't be "hard" to maneuver your mouse cursor over that
tini tiny right/left border of 1px.

It's been a while since I've used Windows, so I fired up my Virtual
WinXP.  It would appear that they've simply opted for the "5px(?)"
border size all around to ensure users can easily resize.  (I don't feel
like rebooting into Win7 to see how it is with the latest Windows)

Perhaps, the solution for Ubuntu Linux, would be to force all themes to
have a 5px theme (by default).  If the user is a aesthetic/power user,
then they can change the border size themselves, then suffer through
difficulty of resizing (or they'll know to use ALT+resize -- although
that in itself has issues).

I truly believe that the default needs to be "user friendly" (i.e. an
easy to use UI in this case), rather than an "aesthetically pleasing 1px
border".

-- 
Resizing windows by grabbing window borders is difficult
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/160311
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