Am Dienstag, den 31.01.2006, 02:07 +0000 schrieb Iain *: > > In no way is it "the wrong thing" > > It could be argued that it is easier to get to the toolbar button than > it is to the edit menu item, so we should maybe remove the menu item > instead.
People here are talking about removing features all the time. How about implementing customizable toolbars as a new feature, or as a recommend feature for the usability guide? Software should be adaptive, if you find no copy/pate/cut icons are faster for you thats ok, remove them. If users worked with programms having those buttons, its easier for them to keep those buttons. Not faster perhaps - but easier, and perhaps the user is more relaxed with this buttons arround. Beeing relaxed can be more effective sometimes. Please notice that users will always have different experiences and that software adapting to the user is better then adapting a users to software. Perhaps there should be a a setting "Users experience: [beginner/advanced]" in gnome-applications to do this job. But i guess no one is really about to _implement_ a new feature like this. just a little ironic today, keep cool ;-) regards, Sven -- _______________________________________________ Usability mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/usability
