On Wednesday 14 January 2004 17:10, Max O'Shea wrote: > I actually find the up button quite useful in Konqueror, especially on > sites like the web CVS on KDE. You see you're a special class of users called "Developers"? You also probably know you can customize your toolbar, many users don't and even if they don't, there's also the "First Impression", that kde is too bloated because it have too many buttons on its toolbars. Really, if you see a webbrowser that doesn't have a Up button you will not say "What the f*ck, this browser doesn't have a Up button?! What kind of browser is this?!", you'll probably search where to enable that button. > But I think there are some buttons that > aren't necessarily needed, eg. cut/copy/paste . I agree partially here. I rather use the X selection instead of Cut&Paste, but some users may use it, I really don't know and I can say nothing. Worth studying. But removing them could improve the visual, so I'm for it. Mozilla doesn't have it and I never saw anybody claiming for it. > Konqueror should change the buttons depending on whether it's being used > for file management or web browsing. Automatically? This could cause the 'dancing toolbar' effect. > Another thing that needs to be changed is the home button when > web browsing - it shouldn't go to ~ Sure. .-------------------------------------------------. |Gustavo Sverzut Barbieri \ >---------------------------------------------------\ | Computer Engineer (Undergraduate) - UNICAMP / 2001 | | Grupo Pró Software Livre - GPSL / UNICAMP | \ | | Jabber..: gsbarbieri@jabber.org | | ICQ.....: 17249123 | | Phone...: +(55) 19 9138 0670 (Mobile) | | Location: Campinas/São Paulo/Brazil | `--------------------------------------------------' _______________________________________________ kde-usability mailing list kde-usability@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-usability