In my opinion, re-work of the Applications lens is required... and this
is certainly *not* low priority.  Many new computer users that I have
set up with Ubuntu (3rd world context) have greatly struggled with this.
Only because of the 3rd party "stop gap" hack "classicmenu-indicator"
have I been able to help people more easily browse and discover what
applications are already installed.

Here are some additonal comments on design-rework help from my
perspective:

1.  Needs to be by category by default (I don't think that browsing a
list of 129 Applications sorted alphabetically is useful to anyone).

2. Need to have quick keyboard navigation, or,

3.  just "hover" over a category name to see the apps under the
category.

4. Currently have to manually "unclick" filters if want to see a
different category.  So, if click "Games" need to then unclick "Games"
before clicking "Office" or else you get "Games + Office".  This concept
is just not efficient or intuitive for beginning users, and beginning
users are the ones that desperately need a usable Application Menu.

Here are some examples:

AxeMenu is a good one (Gnome-Shell:
https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/327/axe-menu/ but not their
default of showing "favorites" but rather "Applications": also note when
hovering over an App its description is showed in the bottom corner:
again helpful as someone may not have a clue about what "Pidgin" does)

MintMenu (Linux Mint) is very similar to Axe Menu (maybe they share
code??).

Lastly, Cardapio (https://launchpad.net/cardapio) is a good one to look
at.

In summary, discoverability, especially for limited skill computer
users, is essential and needs significant re-working over the current
paradigm.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/846374

Title:
  Discoverability of all applications in Dash is not good

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