← Back to team overview

touch-packages team mailing list archive

[Bug 1275761] Re: No standard explanation of why you're offline

 

Quick note that I'm not tagging this for rtm14/qa-daily-testing as it
doesn't pass the "functional overview" check; obviously important but
some design input necessary, unlikely to fix immediately.

-- 
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Touch seeded packages, which is subscribed to indicator-network in
Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1275761

Title:
  No standard explanation of why you're offline

Status in Network Menu:
  New
Status in “indicator-network” package in Ubuntu:
  New

Bug description:
  When an Ubuntu Touch app tries to use data, but no data connection is
  available, there is no user-visible explanation of what is going on or
  how to fix it.

  A device might have no data connection because:
  (a) it is in Flight Mode, or
  (b) Wi-Fi is otherwise turned off, or
  (c) there is no cellular data connection, because:
      - the device has no SIM, or
      - it is not connected to a carrier, or
      - cellular data is turned off, or
      - the carrier is refusing data traffic (for example, because you are over quota), or
      - it is roaming and data roaming is turned off.

  (This list is not necessarily complete.)

  In cases where immediate connectivity is not vital, an app might
  detect that it is not available, and use queued actions or
  placeholders. For example, a mail client might store offline messages
  that you wanted to send, remember which messages you wanted to delete
  and file, and so on. Similarly, a Dash screen that usually returns
  online search results might show only offline results, with some sort
  of indication that you need to go online for online results to appear.

  But where an action absolutely requires connectivity to be useful,
  Ubuntu should provide some sort of standard UI explaining why you are
  offline and, where possible, explaining what to do to go online.

  If this message is modal, probably it should be limited so that it
  does not appear more than once before an app is unfocused (whether by
  focusing a different app, or the phone locking), and so it does not
  appear more than once every five minutes or so.

  The design should take into account the Wi-Fi prompt (bug 1287210), so
  that there aren't two prompts jostling each other.

  [Originally reported by David Isaacs.]

To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/indicator-network/+bug/1275761/+subscriptions