On 12/18/2009 04:56 PM, Samuel Arthur Wright Illingworth wrote:
Reducing the number of key clicks isn't a gain if it means you have a much bigger list to look through. You can't measure usability purely in number of clicks, or having the categorized menu would never have been an improvement in the first place.That doesn't mean that more clicks means it's more usable, though. In Gnome-Shell, if I want to launch an application that isn't on my recently opened applications list, I have a lot more clicks than before. 1. Open Activities (arguably this can be triggered without a click, though) 2. Click "Browse" on the Applications section. 3. Click on the category I want. 4. Sift through a page or two (why the pages!?) to find the application I'm looking for. This is not intuitive, takes forever (especially considering the speed it opens the menus), and is at least twice as confusing as the method present in the current Gnome stable release. Also, I only have two clicks to open an application as I am now. 1. Open the applications menu. 2. Highlight the mouse over a menu and when it pops up (you don't need to click it, just like in Windows), click the app you want to open. There are lots of users that can make use of workspaces, but you shouldn't force them to use them. |