On March 26, 2010, Christophe Olinger wrote: > This is not 100 % true. At the moment Shantanu and me try to have it > also scale down to netbook size screens. This will be a bigger user > base in the future than big tv screens IMHO. Also that is my
i should have been more specific. by "large screens" i meant things larger than the n900 or the Jax10's we had at tokamak 4. i think a primary use case for PMC will be laptops, with T.V.s being a secodary one. as Zack points out, more important than screen size, however, is the input device. on pocketable devices, that is your finger (or, at worst, a stylus). on laptops, that's a keyboard and mouse. on a T.V. it's a hand-held remote control. i don't think we can sanely target both pocketable devices and laptops/T.V.s due to this. i do think we can target both laptops and T.V.s, however. the reason for this is that while the T.V. is limited by a remote control input, on the laptop use case when one fires up a full screen mediacenter (which is what PMC should be) you want to go into a simplified user experience that is centered around media viewing. if you want something richer, that doesn't take over the whole display and with more point-and-click finesse, that's what apps like kaffeine and amarok are for. this means that PMC only needs to address the same audiences that plasma- desktop or plasma-netbook would, and should be aiming for a UI that is clear enough that even a remote control is good enough. to go down this path a little bit more, even, here are some typical use cases i have in mind for PMC based on observation of today's typical computer user: * Joe is on a train / airplane travelling between two cities. The trip is long enough to watch the latest episode of his favourite T.V. show which he downloaded the night before from his PVR at home. Joe pops open his laptop, clicks on the Desktop Toolbox and selects "Media Center". PMC loads and he selects "Video", which presents a list of videos on his internal hard drive. * Jane is at home and wants to show her dinner guests pictures from the recent weekend trip she went on. Jane plugs her laptop into the living room television, opens the application launcher (Kickoff, Lancelot) and selects "Media Center". PMC starts up and she selects "Photos" which shows various sets of photo albums. After going through the "Weekend Ski Trip" photos, she goes back and selects Videos -> Youtube and loads a Youtube playlist of top 40 music videos to play in the background while they visit. * Jaqueline sits down on the couch with her husband Jack and they turn on the television and their Plasma Media Center set top box. They grab the remote control and check the videos that they had recorded / downloaded but haven't watched yet. They select an episode of House and another of Fawlty Towers and press "Play". now, these are the use cases i have in my mind. they may be different from those working on PMC have. hopefully not, but it's certainly possible. :) we should therefore get to documenting what's being done here. i've gone ahead and started a page here: http://techbase.kde.org/Projects/Plasma/Plasma_Media_Center feel free to change any and all content and add, add, add more to it. the use cases above do provide some interesting insights, though: it would be sensible to have a Digikam photo provider for PMC so that one can create their photo albums in Digikam and then later view those same albums in PMC. it would be sensible to have some notion of what's been watched and be able to set up simple "playlists" by selecting mutiple items from a list of available media. it doesn't matter if PMC works on the N900 well. thoughts? -- Aaron J. Seigo humru othro a kohnu se GPG Fingerprint: 8B8B 2209 0C6F 7C47 B1EA EE75 D6B7 2EB1 A7F1 DB43 KDE core developer sponsored by Qt Development Frameworks _______________________________________________ Plasma-devel mailing list Plasma-devel@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/plasma-devel