Acts of Volition

Comments

nathan -

Here's a small corner of the desktop that is taking shape right now: Miguel de Icaza has demonstrated an unobtrusive notification mechanism here and here.

Although it's a demo right now, it could easily become a standard gnome panel applet in the future. What features should such a notification mechanism have? Miguel suggests a history feature for browsing previous messages. How should apps use the notifications? What's good about similiar notfication mechanisms in other desktops and what would you change if you could?

A larger related topic, also suggested by Miguel, is adding a section on notification patterns to the
Gnome HIG.

Slip -

Ah! Very nice, just added those developer blog's to favorites. Getting out of control! :)

Dan -

I think the title of this article should have been 'The Future of Gnome Desktop Development.' Desktop Linux is certainly not defined by a single window manager, which to me is a major factor in why it hasn't become more widely adopted.

anonymous -

<blockquote>"I think the title of this article should have been 'The Future of Gnome Desktop Development.' Desktop Linux is certainly not defined by a single window manager, which to me is a major factor in why it hasn't become more widely adopted."</blockquote>

The reality is I don't see anyone pushing qt-sharp or qt-java as acceptable toolkits for KDE-base. But when gnome/gtk+-sharp or gnome-java are deemed acceptable for gnome core and become production ready, all of a sudden Linux looks more enticing on the corporate desktop. See iFolder and Novell for an example of what's to come. I loved KDE for years, I think it's a wonderful, elegant environment, but it's going be left behind soon.

The Gnome + JIT revolution will make Linux in the workplace.

Joe -

The last post is such bull. KDE left behind? By what? Something that you say "will" about? Show me results.