From kde-panel-devel Fri Jan 13 05:28:23 2006 From: Reaching Farr Date: Fri, 13 Jan 2006 05:28:23 +0000 To: kde-panel-devel Subject: [Panel-devel] The ALI: do we really need or want it? Message-Id: <43C73A77.6000105 () thunderhead ! net> X-MARC-Message: https://marc.info/?l=kde-panel-devel&m=113713012912262 The argument seems to boil down to this: *There are a group of people who want to click on a file (that is somehow presented to them) and have an application launch to handle that file *There is another group of people who want to launch an application that they will then use to pick the data to handle. Both seem very reasonable. As far as I can tell no one is saying that the other is a horrible idea. In fact you can do BOTH in most current desktop environments. If you double click on a .ogg file it tends to launch a media player that can play it. Same with a .odt file and a .cpp file. It seems to me that the first camp of people simply want the most *applicable* (or that which is most likely to be applicable) data presented in a better manner. Currently you would have to go through an intermediate application (Konqueror) to select a file. To me there seems to be only a few alternatives (please feel free to add your own): *Have your file smack-dab on the desktop. Very accessible from there. *Have it on a sidebar. Either the traditional one such as kicker, or a fancy bubbly one like the Apple launcher. Perhaps even kinda like Quicksilver. *Have your files in an applet/plasmoid. *Have a special menu on a launcher that will display some *portion* of the total files on a system, in some ordered or random format. First, whichever of these options you pick you will not be able to fit all the files. At some point you will have to use an application of some sort to find the rest of them. Second, except for the last option, all of these are already done, and the last one is could easily be implemented. So if the question is "If you click on a file, should it reliably do something useful" (such as launch an application to handle it, or offer to install one that will) then the answer is a definitive Yes! Should there be an easy way to access all of your files? Yes again. Might that include a menu on the launcher, an applet, files on the desktop or telepathic mind control with the user? Only if they want it. Solution: Provide (a) context-sensitive menu(s) for the user to use or not to use, along with something along the lines of a traditional menu that provides easy access to applications, all of which are user configurable. Cause lets face it, no two users are the same. Everyone is going to want something different. Even if one way is better then the other isn't going to make people switch. People still use Windows :-) The best way would seem to be to have the two coexist, unless someone has invented something absolutely revolutionary and isn't telling us. Regards, Chris Wailes Reaching Farr _______________________________________________ Panel-devel mailing list Panel-devel@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/panel-devel