[Usability] Proposal to solve some drawbacks of the current spatial implementation
- From: Maurizio Colucci <seguso forever tin it>
- To: usability gnome org
- Subject: [Usability] Proposal to solve some drawbacks of the current spatial implementation
- Date: Mon, 25 Oct 2004 14:07:01 +0200
Hello,
Although I agree with the principles of spatiality, there's something I
don't like with the actual way the spatial paradigm in GNOME is
implemented. The problem is two-fold, depending on your style of usage:
1. if you do not use middle-click or similar technique, the problem is
that you get a proliferation of open windows, most of which are useless.
This makes it more difficult to switch between windows in the
window-list. (Of course, periodically closing useless windows by hand is
a non-solution --- it's like doing your own garbage collection; it's
simply something you would not want to do.)
2. OTOH, if you do use middle click, you don't get a proliferation of
open windows, but you are forced too decide too early whether the
current folder must be closed or kept visible. This is annoying because,
when you have an objective in mind which you are pursuing (like reaching
a precise window), you don't want to have to think about secondary
issues like whether the intermediate windows must be closed. That
decision must be postponeable.
I am proposing the following change, which solves both problems in one shot:
In the gnome panel, add a global dropdown button called "recent
folders". when clicked, it simply pops up a menu with the most recently
visited locations, SORTED BY LAST VISITING TIME. It is GLOBAL because it
contains locations visited from ANY nautilus window; it is not relative
to one window. If you select a folder from the menu, a nautilus window
relative to that directory is opened (or brought on top if already opened).
What is interesting about this solution is that it solves both problems:
1. It solves problem 1 because, although there will still be many open
windows in the window-list, nonetheless it will be easy to switch
between windows, because of the sorting: the useless folders will
quickly end up in the bottom of the "recent list", so you will rarely
have to look at them. Almost always, you'll only have to scan the first
few items in the list (tested). Especially, continuously toggling
between two windows (a very frequent operation) is trivial with the
"recent list" but terribly difficult with the current wnidow-list.
2. It solves problem 2 because you can always use only middle click, yet
quickly reach a recent folders. So you are no more forced to an early
decision about the importance of intermediate folders.
-----
Then, optionally, in nautilus, you could swap the behavior of middle
click and left click (i.e. default to "close parent window"), since
there would not be a reason for left clicking anymore (or at least it
would be very rarely needed). This would make sense because if you only
introduce complexity, without removing any, you are not really doing a
simplification.
----
In case you want to try this paradigm, a working implementation can be
found in the file manager http://onefinger.sf.net.
I am very interested in exactly what problems do you think this
navigation style could have. (I have been using it for months and I
still can't find a drawback.)
Maurizio
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