On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 10:00:53 -0000 Matthew Paul Thomas <m...@canonical.com> wrote:
> That doesn't mean all options are bad. Sometimes an option would > improve efficiency or satisfaction for some fraction of existing or > potential users; and the improvement and the fraction may, together, > be large enough to outweigh the option's disadvantages. (For example, > accessibility options may be useful for very few people, but they can > make a dramatic difference to whether those people can use the system > at all.) So a proposal to add an option is most likely to be > successful if it makes some effort to describe what sort of people > would benefit, and how they would benefit. Just saying "It's a > usability issue" is unhelpfully vague. Not seeing how, even after it *has* been explained here, is just being obtuse. I am *quite* sure that I am not the only person who has poor peripheral vision and whose attention is largely focused on one quadrant of the screen. It clearly makes it easier for me if I can have the notifications pop up in the area of the screen where I am most likely to see them. This neither causes bloat nor makes the application unintelligible. For all of the statements you've made, all you have done is secure the point that we're trying to make in the first place that they should be configurable in terms of placement. I am not asking that it be configurable in terms of colors, shades, fonts, placement, duration, serial alerts or parallel alerts, and everything else. That'd clearly be a bit much, especially since any application should use those settings from the base system, anyway. But when it comes to visibility, for me and others like me (I *strongly* doubt that I am the only person that works around his/her vision issues in the way that I do, by positioning screen elements where I can see them), it doesn't take much thought to realize that this is a usability issue. If it does, you're thinking about it wrong. notify-osd isn't the only thing where treatment like this from Canonical is becoming a regular issue. I'm noticing treatment like this in reporting even very obvious bugs that should never have made it into the release, where it's being looked at as a non-issue and probably won't be fixed. At least one of those bugs (re: the gnome meta package) is a repeat offender and will be broken for yet another release. Oh, well, I guess. Why bother filing reports, if they're just going to get ignored and argued until they no longer matter because the releases are supposed to be as immutable as possible, and with immutable releases, fixing trivial bugs becomes artifically difficult? Maybe we should file a bug report (or series of them) on how bugs are handled in Launchpad for the Ubuntu project. Or maybe that'd be just a large a waste of time. --- Mike -- notify-osd doesn't honor my preference https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/346095 You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs