Re: Location-aware GNOME Shell - weekly report 1
- From: Allan Caeg <allancaeg ubuntu com>
- To: Stéphane Maniaci <stephane maniaci gmail com>
- Cc: gnome-soc-list gnome org, gnome-shell-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: Location-aware GNOME Shell - weekly report 1
- Date: Mon, 30 May 2011 09:16:24 +0800
Just curious. Making GNOME location-aware sounds like a big thing. This report suggests that the project seems to be about the multi-timezone clock and weather candy. Is this project intended to do more location-aware features on top of the clock and weather stuff?
Good stuff here. Keep 'em coming.
On Sat, May 28, 2011 at 3:35 PM, Stéphane Maniaci
<stephane maniaci gmail com> wrote:
Web version with nothing fancier available at:
http://freesteph.info/post/2011/05/28/Location-aware-GNOME-Shell%
3A-Weekly-report-01
Hello,
Here's the first weekly report of my summer of code project: making the
Shell location-aware with a multi-timezone clock and some weather candy
later (didn't write to the shell list earlier).
== What happened this week ==
I started toying with the GNOME Shell UI, using my unexisting _javascript_
skills to reproduce somehow this mockup[0]. Took me one Caltrain ride
(now my default time unit) to build a little dummy clock, as showed on
the, tada, screenshot[1].
Quickly realized that I really needed solid design before doing any UI,
so I tried to gather all the rockstars of #gnome-design together on
Thursday for a quick brainstorming. Nothing concrete came out of it, but
here's the point I remembered:
- Displaying time + weather for all locations isn't a good idea (we
already consume a lot of space in the date/clock popup, and we want to
keep it a popup) ;
- It's still pretty unsure where all those settings (locations CRUD,
weather config) will land in the control-center ;
- XChat doesn't record any log, damn it.
Bottom line: we need to have another meeting and define more precisely
what we want to expose to the user.
I also downloaded geocode-glib, geoclue and libgweather in order to look
at the backend work, but didn't actually tried it out.
Not related to GSoC, I worked on a couple of branches for PiTiVi that I
want to get merged after the awesome (pre)release that came out this
week!
Oh, and I ran into busy Luis Villa in Caltrain last week, had a nice
half an hour chat with him! Talking about achievements!
== What's next ==
Definitely bother the design team again, while still not expecting some
actual UI sketches by the end of next week. The date/weather/timezone
thingy is a significant feature of 3.2 (pressure on me), so I expect a
lot of bikeshedding about how it should look/behave/configure.
I would also like a little Vala/Gtk program that asks/guess a location
and then retrieve the timezone using one of the forementionned
libraries.
== Scheduling ==
I'm on time. Les gens heureux ne sont pas pressés ;)
== Problems & tips ==
A big issue that comes to me after this week is collaboration ; I
thought the design of the clock could happen on some mailing list
(because you can read them offline, take time to answer, etc), but I was
told in #gnome-design that IRC was the way to go, since there was no
gnome-design mailing list and that there would be too much noise on it
anyway. This is a bit sad, since IRC is very unpractical in terms of,
talking about it, timezones, offline record, etc. I'm not a big fan of
IRC meeting + wiki logging/recording, so if anybody (and you, design
rockstars) can think of a better way to think together, let me know.
That's a very long report, have a nice weekend!
Cheers,
− Stéphane.
[0]:
https://gitorious.org/gnome-design/gnome-design/blobs/master/mockups/clock/date-n-time.png
[1]: http://freesteph.info/public/GSoC/img/js-clock-first-try.png
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Regards,
Allan
User Experience Designer
+63 918 948 2520
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