Is this substantially faster than just opening the files on other people's computers? For me it seems to take the same amount of time, which afaict defeats the main point (or am I wrong about the main point?)
Making the thumbnails in Nautilus their biggest side seems more useful to me to find the files/pictures I want (if I really want to just use Nautilus for some reason). Thanks, Bryan On Thu, Jun 8, 2017 at 4:31 PM, 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 -- ubuntu-desktop mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-desktop
