Le 18/10/2012 17:58, Ted Gould a écrit :
On Thu, 2012-10-18 at 11:10 +0200, Didier Roche wrote:
In a world where we are using more and more connected web services doing
some of our tasks (web mails, online documentation editing, online music
players…) should we imagine having a more adapated image to our users?
This will mean reducing our main image footprint by removing some of
those tools we install by default:
I'm thinking of thunderbird, libreoffice, rhythmbox and other main
applications of our desktop for instance.
What I see is that more people are having data online, but that doesn't
necessarily mean using online clients.  Or, in many cases the reason
they're using the web client is because they don't know that there is a
better, more integrated experience available.

The counter-part would be to make our desktop smarter. I can imagine:
- having the messaging menu (or an icon in the launcher, or an icon in
the dash) showing, the first time you try to configure your email
account, a window asking for your email
- based on the answer, either proposing to directly use a web
application (with unity integration) for an @gmail.com, @yahoo.com… and
other email providers known to have good web integrations. Otherwise,
proposing to install thunderbird, ideally opening the account creating
setup prefiled with the information already be done.
(we can of course imagine a checkbox to override the "smart" behavior).
So I think that this is an interesting idea, but I'd propose it a little
differently.  If you, for instance said that you have a Google account
we could offer to integrate the GMail website but also offer to set up
IMAP to "Synchronize e-mail locally".

That's precisely why I've written:

"(we can of course imagine a checkbox to override the "smart" behavior)."

prefiling thunderbird fields based on those (so the user doesn't have to type 
twice his email) would be awesome if we can get to it ;)

Cheers,
Didier




--
ubuntu-desktop mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-desktop

Reply via email to