-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 hi all... i've stayed pretty much completely out of the kcontrol discussion that's been ongoing because i'm tired of discussing it for the Nth time. =) i and others have been around this tree many times already. most of the discussions can be found in the archives for this list, but here's a synopsis of my personal conclusions to date: the key is the navigation and feedback interface not the panels, the names of the panels, the hierarchy they are in, the order of tabs on the left or any other part of kcontrol. those items are all things that can and should be addressed only after the main interface has been properly refitted. some details: o using separate windows is a compromise position. most users don't deal with multiple windows well and there are few if any panels that require other panels open at the same time to be useful, so this should be avoided if at all possible. o simple file browser like icon interfaces suck: you can't tell where you need to go if you organize things into "folders", and if you don't organize them into a hierarchy you end up with a morass of panels. o only so many panels can be eliminated, and for better or worse there's no way to stop 3rd parties from adding to the panels. o there are some clear and simple distinctions between large groups of the panels: hardware, administration tasks and everything else o the relationships between panels are multidimensional. no amount of hierarchy reshuffling or renaming will make that any different. the interface to the panels should therefore reflect this reality as opposed to try and work around it. o the search should be integrated into the top level of the kcontrol interface and should be able to display results in the same place that the panels usually appear. think google search in your web browser meets kcontrol. the search index parameters need to be extended as well to include keyword ranking and relationships to other panels. o a metadata view should probably be provided alongside each panel that shows at a minimum short help (50 words or less), links to extended help and related panels, and perhaps a shorthand system for simple navigation o the MacOS X control panel with top level groups and panels provides some interesting lessons we can learn from o metapanels are an interesting avenue to explore. the new theme manager metapanel being worked on is a good example of this. - -- Aaron J. Seigo while (!horse()); cart(); -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.2-rc1-SuSE (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQE//D8e1rcusafx20MRAiBiAJ4iA3NyLt2W8gUCaOPA3jlE9LrzrwCcCf5y cyxsD/6W/Ddl+z/YHbOWqsI= =iMhr -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ kde-usability mailing list kde-usability@mail.kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-usability