Re: firefox user trying out epiphany looking for bookmarks toolbar



On 3 November, 2005, Reinout van Schouwen wrote:

On Wed, 2 Nov 2005, Matthew Thomas wrote:

First, there is only one thing in Epiphany's Bookmarks Bar by default, and *it's not a bookmark*. At least, it's not a bookmark in the sense that anyone

For what it's worth, the current 1.9 series doesn't distinguish anymore between a regular toolbar and one that contains (smart) bookmarks or topics.

I think that's another bad idea for much the same reason. It's conflating two things -- bookmarks and browser controls -- that should be separate.

who has used the Internet during the past ten years has come to understand and recognize bookmarks. And as much as you might marvel at the technical wizardry that lets a text field appear in the Bookmarks Bar, it still doesn't make sense.

Even if you don't understand what the text field is supposed to do,
clicking 'Search the Web' will take you to Google. Smart bookmarks are
still bookmarks :-)

That is also surprising-in-a-bad-way, because it looks like a label.

So I think it might be time to bite the bullet and have a single
search field on the toolbar, like Firefox and Safari do. Besides being more obvious, this would have other benefits.

Personally I'm not in favour of that. Typing in your query in the
address bar already lets you select the search engine/online
dictionary/whatever after you've typed your search text.

That's a good fallback for if you start typing in the wrong field by accident, but it isn't obvious as a way of starting a search.

There are bugs open about showing favicons in the dropdown and about supporting the mozilla sidebar addSearchEngine function to create smart bookmarks. I expect that once these are implemented, we'll have equivalent functionality without adding another interface element.

It's not about "equivalent functionality", it's about being obvious.

Besides, using the main address bar has the advantage of being able to see the complete query if your search text is longer than one or two words.

True.

*   It gives you a single place to go to see your recent searches.

I'd support the idea of remembering smart bookmark queries, but it would have to be very easy to delete them from the autocomplete widget, otherwise I think there would be big negative privacy implications. (Accidentally seeing a URL visited by someone else is one thing, seeing someone else's search queries is quite another!)

Only to the extent that "http://www.google.com/search?q=jewellery+gifts+in+Birmingham"; is harder to read than "jewellery gifts in Birmingham".

...
In the other thread we're discussing the Add Bookmark dialogue, maybe it should be considered there if a checkbox for adding a bookmark to the toolbar is desirable. Also, if I'm not mistaken, the new toolbar editor contains a 'Quick Bookmark' item that allows you to select a bookmark from the menu to place on the toolbar once you drag the QB item to the toolbar, would that be sufficient?
...

As above, I think conflating bookmarks with toolbar buttons is a mistake.

And third, the same problem occurs when editing bookmarks -- there
should be a "Bookmarks Bar" place in the editor where I can see all
the Bookmarks Bar bookmarks in one place, but there isn't.

To be fair, all bookmarks in the bookmarks bar are plainly visible in
the browser window itself.
...

That's no good for editing, unless you're one of those unusual people who uses the right mouse button. :-)

Cheers
--
Matthew Paul Thomas
http://mpt.net.nz/



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