Good suggestion! In addition, I would very much like to be able to associate applications with persistent weights like "important" to have them more likely to show up early in any linear arrangements.
I have a suggestion to further boost the visual memory of the user. Various widgets, borders and text of a workspace could perhaps be associated with a particular color, drawn from a palette when the workspace is created. These colors do not need to be omnipresent or intrusive but applied in a subtle manner. They could perhaps be applied to the digits of the clock and the characters of the "Activities" button in normal view, and to window borders and workspace borders in the overview or Window Picker to help the user quickly associate applications with tasks and workspaces. Best regards, Andreas On Mon, Dec 6, 2010 at 11:39 AM, Allan Caeg <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello, > The Dash and the planned Workspace Switcher take advantage of the user's > spatial memory. It does so by having a fixed arrangement of items (app icons > for Dash/workspaces for Workspace Switcher). Their linear order of the items > can also be changed manually by the user and this order can have meaning > attached to it (like sorting by level of importance). > On the other hand, the Window Picker is two-dimensional instead of linear. > Also unlike the Dash and Workspace switcher, the arrangement of items (in > this case, windows) depends on an algorithm and the user can't manually edit > the sorting. > To visualize it, > see http://img405.imageshack.us/img405/7938/windowpicker.png . > This is my recommendation inspired by Firefox Panorama. Like on the dash, > let's take advantage of the user's spatial memory by attaching a fixed > linear relationship between windows. It'll still be flexible by allowing to > user to manually rearrange windows, so the user can meaningfully sort them. > The approach here is just a bit different from the Dash or Window Picker, > because there's a bigger real estate allocated, but the principles would be > fundamentally similar. > It's best to read the Principles of Design that Aza wrote here to understand > the rationale behind and to test the latest Firefox 4 beta build to test how > it works. > > Thoughts? > -- > Regards, > Allan > User Experience Designer > http://www.google.com/profiles/allancaeg#about > +63 918 948 2520 > > > _______________________________________________ > gnome-shell-list mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-shell-list > > -- Do you want to tell me a secret? My Public key can be downloaded from the link below to ease encrypted private conversation using a desktop email client. Vill du berätta en hemlighet? Min krypteringsnyckel kan laddas ner från länken nedan och användas till krypterad konversation med ett vanligt epost-program. https://keyserver2.pgp.com/vkd/SubmitSearch.event?SearchCriteria=andreas.wallberg%40gmail.com&EmailOrName=2&SearchType=0 _______________________________________________ usability mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/usability
