12 Aug 2011 04:47
Re: Desktop Development Idea
Hongqing Yang <hoyang <at> redhat.com>
2011-08-12 02:47:21 GMT
2011-08-12 02:47:21 GMT
----- Original Message ----- > From: "Benjamin Trias" <jesuisbenjamin <at> gmail.com> > To: "Steven Yong" <woongiap <at> gmail.com> > Cc: gnome-devel-list <at> gnome.org > Sent: Thursday, August 11, 2011 11:36:26 PM > Subject: Re: Desktop Development Idea > Hi Steven, > > Thanks for your interest. > > The idea consists of a dashboard providing the kind of advanced > information you need about your computer, music, communication, > weather, home, rss etc. The entire dashboard is hidden below the > desktop as it were, only to show the topmost part, living just a thin > edge, much like the current-gnome panel. When hitting a button/icon on > the panel however, the dashboard rises showing the related > information. eg. my weather icon shows 23°C, but i want details, so > when clicking on it, the dashboard rises and i see the weather for the > entire week, radar-map etc. You can imagine how that applies to other > types of information. > Each type of info is contained within a window on the dashboard. You > can switch window much like tabs, thanks to a menu which can appear > either on the left or right (the menu consists of a list of those > types of information). > You can also pin some of those windows to see multiple kind of > information simultaneously. A pinned window will also show whenever > the dashboard would rise again. > Explicitly closing the dashboard by clicking on an button or cliking > outside of the dashboard would lower the dashboard again, leaving only > the topmost panel-like bit visible. > The space occupied by the dashboard would depend on the amount of data > to display or be constrained to a maximum by the end-user. > Notifications could also appear either as a horizontally scrolling > text on the panel-bit or as a slight rise of this dashboard with text > to display. > > The point of this is to make all the handy information that most > people use daily available on the desktop, without having them > fetching it from various programs or browsers. The switch between > panel and dashboard is aims at providing flexibility between basic > information and thorough information. > > I've got some mockup available but i don't know if this message will > go through with a URL: > https://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/TYTjs94NaQrsMPlLgAcQvIrypTNYvS81JK5a63XKS2o?feat=directlink > > I'm not that good in programming, it took me a while only to figure > out how to reserve space on the screen, I haven't figured out what's > the best way to get the raising/lowering of the window yet. I know > it's way above my league, and it's a pretty clumsy approach, but > that's what I've got. > > I hope I was somehow clear on what I meant. > > Regards, > Benjamin > > > On 11 August 2011 17:14, Steven Yong < woongiap <at> gmail.com > wrote: > > > > > What is your idea? > On Aug 11, 2011 10:18 PM, "Benjamin Trias" < jesuisbenjamin <at> gmail.com > > wrote: > > That seems a little like Leonard OS, but I have to say the current GNOME3 is really not very user friendly, I have to click many times to open an application, of course we are progressing, the v3.1 is much better than v3.0. Hongqing _______________________________________________ gnome-devel-list mailing list gnome-devel-list <at> gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-devel-list
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