Re: My humble opinions about Nautilus interface



1. In 2.2 whether the sidebar, location bar etc.. are on is saved by the
current state.
2. AFAIK there is a new tree in development.
3. Trees suck anyway ;)


On Mon, 2003-02-03 at 04:29, Fabio Gomes wrote:
> Hello, folks.
> 
> I'm using Nautilus 2.0.6 (which comes with Red Hat 8.0)  and I would 
> like to share with you some opinions about Nautilus interface (and GNOME 
> in general).
> 
> Please note that I'm not a member of nautilus-list, so I will follow the 
> discussion from the web archive. Also, I'm not a native English speaker, 
> so my words may be confusing at some points.
> 
> Well, let's work. I think that:
> 
> 1. The Side Pane on/off state should be saved as well as its current 
> component being used (such as Tree or History);
> 
> 2. Everything that Nautilus can access (filesystem, configuration, 
> cameras, rpms, fonts, network, etc.) should be able to be accessed in an 
> usable way from the Tree;
> 
> 3. The Tree selection should follow the user as he/she navigates through 
> folders, machines, etc.;
> 
> 4. Right-clicking on a Tree item should bring up the same pop-up menu as 
> when clicking on the Icon View;
> 
> 5. More Tree: when a folder does not have any subfolder, its arrow 
> should not be visible. This means that Nautilus should scan for 
> subfolders each folder which is expanded in the tree. (In 2.0.6, it 
> always shows the arrow and, when there are no subfolders, an "(Empty)" 
> subitem is shown);
> 
> 6. Even more Tree: Tree items should behave exactly like Icon View 
> items, so emblems, custom icons and context menus would work the same 
> way. I think this envolves (a lot of) code sharing between the icon view 
> and the Tree.
> 
> I think a Tree is very important in a graphical file manager. Without a 
> tree, Drag and Drop is almost useless, specially when dealing with small 
> screens (1024x768 or 800x600).
> 
> As a GNOME lover, I've been following the project since the beginning. I 
> see that GNOME has a GREAT usability culture and I simply love the 
> improvements made to Gnome 2.
> 
> But i'ts a pity that the Nautilus Tree was almost abandoned (as we can 
> see) in favor of Usability. I've read in some mailing list that "a tree 
> confuses users". I noticed that sometimes we think too much about 
> Usability and forget to think about PRODUCTIVITY, which is a very 
> important subject. A tree is non-usable but is DEAD productive. At the 
> same time, an icon-only interface with  navigation buttons is usable but 
> is non-productive.
> 
> I think the user should be able to choose between productivity or 
> usability. Yes. The Tree should be invisible by default. :)
> 
> Thank you guys for developing Nautilus. I love it more at each new release.
> 
> Fabio Gomes de Souza
> fabio gs2 com br
> 
> NAUTILUS TREE! NAUTILUS TREE! NAUTILUS TREE! NAUTILUS TREE! :D
-- 
		 .--= [ MArk Finlay - sisob ] =--.

        [ Gnome User's Board : www.gnomesupport.org/forums ]
    [ Public Key: http://evolvedoo.sf.net/sisobatericomdotnet.asc  ]

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part



[Date Prev][Date Next]   [Thread Prev][Thread Next]   [Thread Index] [Date Index] [Author Index]