> Den 18. nov. 2011 04:51, skrev Omar B.:
> > - the items that now hide inside the MM are the icons (or what used to be icons in the panel/systray).
> >
> > ref.
> >
https://a248.e.akamai.net/assets.github.com/img/15183cadf2a9cdd7781aea9a6a22b84455adf703/687474703a2f2f6935342e74696e797069632e636f6d2f32343136787a6f2e706e67
> >
>
> No, that is not true. The entries are in the menu all the time. It's
> just the window that's being hidden. It doesn't have anything to do with
> the indicator.
> > - users used to spot these icons quickly
> >
> > ref.
> >
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_FJH0hYZmVtc/TALwoQRxZrI/AAAAAAAAIBY/4Wxk1JmG-34/s1600/Selection_002.png
>
> Read Microsofts description of why that was a horrible idea and why
> they've wanted to get rid of it for more than a decade. In short, that
> system was completely incomprehensible because all apps would work in
> completely different ways. Some would use left-click, others would use
> right click. Some would use double-click and still some would use
> middle-click. They also didn't symbolize things in a similar way, so you
> would have to understand every single icon separately.
>
> You've completely drifted off course here, if your point was to make
> Unity easier to understand and learn.
>
> It is very difficult for me to understand why you would force people to
> use Unity if they want a similar environment to Windows 95. Use Lxpanel
> instead. Actually, we have panels that make Ubuntu look exactly like
> Windows. It is an extremely bad idea to have as a main objective that
> Ubuntu should be automatically useable as long as you're accustomed to
> Windows.
>
> Right. They're not used to it, and that seems to be your entire case.
> But it is not a valid argument. People used to say that about
> movies too, before you got sound. «Nobody will ever want to hear an
> actor speak», they said. «People aren't used to it.» That was also used
> as an argument against the use of telephone. People were used to sending
> telegrams, so adding telephone would be a bad idea.
>
> People were once used to entering commands, and the thought of using a
> mouse was difficult to understand. If your type of argument would win,
> we would still be entering commands for everything. You just can't let
> peoples habits get in the way of progress, because then there will be no
> progress.
>
> Jo-Erlend Schinstad
>
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