ShawnJGoff makes a good point that standard buttons are really not the
appropriate widget for the breadcrumbs. Not only are they an illogical
choice, they also look very unattractive. Instead, it would be
preferable if the breadcrumbs were made up of clickable text elements in
the following format: element > element > element. KDE's Dolphin
implements breadcrumbs in exactly this way, as you can see in this
screenshot of Dolphin with Ubuntu's GTK style: http://blog.rom1v.com/wp-
content/uploads/2009/06/dolphin-gnome.png

Using this style of breadcrumbs would allow the vertical space required
for the breadcrumbs to be reduced, and probably the horizontal space as
well. The breadcrumbs could even be moved out of the toolbar and into a
thin strip at the top of the content area, as in the dolphin screenshot,
freeing up space in the toolbar, and allowing it to be reduced to one
row. This would allow the places sidebar to extend further vertically
upward.

Additionally, I agree the combining the stop and reload buttons into one
would be a step in the right direction. This way, the stop button would
only appear when it has a purpose (during long loads of network
resources), and it would be substantially less confusing to users.

Customizable toolbars of the sort that Firefox and Safari have (drag and
drop) would also be a nice feature.

The main characteristic that has traditionally distinguished Gnome is a
commitment to usability. This commitment has served Gnome well over the
years, contributing to its current popularity among Linux/Unix
environments. It is important that we not stop innovating for the sake
of usability, and that we not become bound by tradition, and simply
allow Gnome to stagnate. There are certainly many things that can be
improved about the current Nautilus, and indeed the rest of Gnome, and
these changes should not be dismissed out of hand just because they
involve breaking with convention.

-- 
Nautilus file browser toolbar is complicated, redundant, and ugly
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/386150
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