The functionality of Sushi seems very good but the discoverability is terrible. Has this been raised with upstream at all?
On Fri, Jun 9, 2017 at 8:33 AM Jeremy Bicha <[email protected]> wrote: > Now that gnome-shell is in the default Ubuntu 17.10 daily image, I > think we could maybe start talking about other default apps. If we > want new stuff in main, I think it's good to start the Main Inclusion > process early. > > First, how about gnome-sushi? (Upstream's name is just 'sushi'). > > Sushi is a file previewer for nautilus. It can be activated by > pressing the spacebar when a file is selected. Sushi has been a part > of core GNOME since GNOME 3.2. It is described in the default user > help bundled with GNOME. [1] > > Sushi was never really considered for inclusion in Ubuntu's default > install earlier because it uses gjs which was not desired in Ubuntu > main until we needed GNOME Shell. > > There is one universe dependency: libmusicbrainz5. An earlier version > of this library, libmusicbrainz3, was in main in Ubuntu 12.04 LTS. > > [1] https://help.gnome.org/users/gnome-help/stable/files-preview.html > or you can run the installed version: > yelp help:gnome-help/files-preview > > Thanks, > Jeremy Bicha > > -- > ubuntu-desktop mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-desktop >
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