Regarding point 3 of the hierarchy of application categories being too
hidden, I suggest that even if it were not so hidden it needs
significant re-working (as suggested in my prior comment).  So, it being
too hidden is indeed a major concern, but even if more prominently
found, the way it funcions is less than ideal for browsing installed
apps.

sabdfl did comment on his blog post some time ago
(http://www.markshuttleworth.com/archives/939) about HUD that there are
2 things essential (pardon my quick summary: if you feel it unjust
please read the article and subsequent comments): quick access and
discoverability.  HUD (and I argue the Dash as well) are great for quick
access (when the setting, file name, app name, etc, is known).  But
discoverability is really lacking.  It seems to be added in as an
afterthought compromise.... but needs serious re-working as I would
propose that discoverability is of more importance thatn quick access
(especially if the market is people new to the system).  Right now, most
discoverability seems designed around the search box (type "email" and
now... after recent updates.... Thunderbird will show up).  But we need
visual discovery, especially in a global context where typing skills and
even the system language of the machine is not fluent for many users.

I would recommend clarifying this bug report to be about "visual
discovery of all applications".

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/846374

Title:
  Discoverability of all applications in Dash is not good

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