I disagree with many on this list, methinks. I dislike buttons with text in them. I educated my users to mouse over and wait for the tooltip. Text within buttons helps only in the introductory phase but wastes screen space. I dislike big buttons. I like many and small buttons which give a feeling for sensible actions the application enables. I dislike hiding menus and rearranging menus/toolbars (depending on usage). After some time, users know by heart where to click and do not want to waste time waiting/searching for menu entries / toolbar buttons they know must be there. Many novice users do not look at the menu entries but try the visible toolbar buttons. I found only experienced users configure their toolbars, others do not even know this means. Have you seen how many people just click away the browser pop-up that warns about transferring form data in cleartext over the internet. They rather click on it several times a day for years instead of reading the alert text, understand it and the deactivate the check box so the pop-up never reappears? Just my 2 eurocents. Mark -- Krisztian Mark Szentes produktivIT - Open-Source Solution Provider Siebenbrunnengasse 55/7 A-1050 Wien http://www.produktivit.com _______________________________________________ kde-usability mailing list kde-usability@mail.kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-usability