Correct - the current list of categories is hardcoded. That's obviously
not very cool, but it needs to be that way for various technical
reasons:

 - An "architectural bug" in the Unity<->Places integration makes this
problematic (target for Oneiric)

 - libgnome-menu's API is too limiting to really do anything other than
what it was strictly intended for. This is more problematic to tackle as
libgnome-menu is in some limbo state between being deprecated and moved
to some other component in the G-stack. But could also be Oneiric
material to tackle in some way.

 - Unity's Dash is designed around a very flat concept (or 1 level deep
if you will) for finding apps whereas the full extend of the XDG menu
spec allows menus to nest arbitrarily deep. Wine utilizes deep menu
hierarchies and this just doesn't map very well to the design of Unity.
Do we sacrifice usability or spec compliance? I'd sac spec compliance
any day, but other's may disagree. Need some discussion on this one.

 - If the Wine installer could somehow assign meaning ful XDG categories
to the installed apps they would automagically show up in the existing
categories. It doesn't (in all fairness because it's more or less
impossible)

 - I don't see how it helps the user to put wine apps in their own
dedicated category in the first place? That really seems like debugging
info for us geeks spilling out into the UI to me. If I installed MS
Excel I'd expect to find it in the Office category. If I installed Excel
for my mother she would be very confused why she needed to look under
Wine and not Office to find it.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/753276

Title:
  Currently no way to find wine apps in dash other than searching them
  from search bar

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