On 29/04/11 17:23, William Jon McCann wrote: > > So, my quick recommendations: > > 1. Contacts > * A new application exclusive to and designed for GNOME > * Searchable through the OS overview > - Activating search results opens contact in Contacts app > * App is primarily search based as well > * Browsing is assisted through index paging > * Primary way to initiate new conversations regardless of method > * Should seamlessly integrate contacts from various Online Account providers > > 2. Chat > * We initiate a new design exclusive to and designed for GNOME > * Serves as the app backing the integrated GNOME chat functionality > * Message based - a historical log of "conversations" > * This serves as a record of what chats were performed / missed Hi, I do not understand why the Chat application would need to be based on a historical log of conversations. Such a list would have little consistency over time, making it harder to locate or recognise a particular person to talk to ("now, when was the last time I talked to X?"). There is clearly some value in it, but maybe it would be more useful as a side functionality than as the primary means of interaction. Real-time communications are opportunistic: you talk to people when they are available. Maybe recognition of current availability is more relevant than history, so a list showing the contacts that are online would work better. On the other hand, such an approach could work well for asynchronous (e.g. e-mail) communications. In this case, search would be preferable as the main way to locate a contact because the collection of contacts would be much greater and because one does not depend on the contact's state to start a communication. Regards, Felipe
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