Hi !
(I'm the one who designed the dialog.) > > 1) It should appear less like a dialog and more like "i own your > > screen right now". > > Why? Is there any reason for this other than "Microsoft Windows does > it"? (I've never understood why Windows does it.) I agree, there's probably no reason (and by the way OS X doesn't lock the screen either). > That you can open two instances of the same dialog is a bug for any > dialog, but that doesn't mean all dialogs should darken the screen. The dialog still has a few minor issues that I'm going to solve. However, this particular bug should be solved already. > > 2) The shortcut key actions should work without pressing Alt. This is > > important if the logout dialog is to be triggered by pressing the > > power button of the machine (common on laptops). Someone wants to be > > able to hit [power] [r] to reboot for example. I can do that, no problem. > > 3) Defaults -- If invoked from the logout menu then hitting 'enter' > > should logout - not cancel. If invoked as a result of the user > > hitting the power button then enter should power down. This default > > action should be made clear. Right, I'll make this happen too (still need to see exactly how to handle this when the power button is pressed). About the dialog design, the idea was also that we could just split it into two separate dialogs (and this appears on the wiki spec linked by mpt), one with Logout/Switch (Logout is the default), one with ShutDown/Reboot/Sleep|Hibernate (Shutdown is the default). I think this is a good idea, and in that case we should probably : 1. Make two separate entries in the System menu. 2. Let the power management dialog appear when the Power button is pressed. 3. What about the upper-right icon we're going to add soon ? Should it bring the current dialog, ie with all options at the same time ? Cheers, Manu -- ubuntu-desktop mailing list [email protected] http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-desktop
