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<rss version="2.0" xmlns:admin="http://webns.net/mvcb/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:creativeCommons="http://backend.userland.com/creativeCommonsRssModule" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/html" xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"><channel><title>Ross Burton</title><link>http://www.burtonini.com/blog</link><description>A potted account of Ross' life</description><language>en</language><ttl>60</ttl><dc:creator>Ross Burton</dc:creator><admin:generatorAgent rdf:resource="http://pyblosxom.sourceforge.net/"/><admin:errorReportsTo rdf:resource="mailto:ross+web@burtonini.com"/><item><title>The &quot;GNOME Wishlist&quot;</title><guid isPermaLink="false">computers/gnome-wishlist-pah-20031210</guid><link>http://www.burtonini.com/blog/computers/gnome-wishlist-pah-20031210</link><description>So the every amusing OSNews is running a GNOME Wishlist . Sigh. Where do I start? Nautilus Scripts/Addons Nautilus 2.6 ...</description><content:encoded><![CDATA[  <p>
    So the every amusing OSNews is running a <a
      href="http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=5361&page=1">GNOME
      Wishlist</a>. Sigh. Where do I start?
  </p>
  <h2>Nautilus Scripts/Addons</h2>
  <p>
    Nautilus 2.6 will support funky new plugins, with a clean API and decent
    menu merging.  I though Eugenia was keeping up with Nautilus development,
    she certainly posts on nautilus-list now and again.
  </p>
  <h2>Spatial Mode</h2>
  <p>
    It's not finished -- either help make it totally rock by
    commenting/fixing/patching, or wait until is it finished.
  </p>
  <h2>Metacity Features</h2>
  <p>
    The standard rant about "viewports" and "workspaces". <em>Again</em>. Jesus
    people, ask for a feature and not the name for a subset of available
    features that you have used before. Please.  I'm about to ask God to extend
    his kitten-killing to Metacity...  For glueing windows to the corner of the
    screen... well, press <tt>shift</tt> once you are close to the corner and it
    will magically glue itself, without snapping to the windows it sees en route.
  </p>
  <h2>File Selector</h2>
  <p>
    Eugenia's comments are pretty useless: "...is pretty bad". Not really a
    comprehensive UI review, but thanks anyway. But that's not what I'm confused
    about -- I'm confused about the number of people who think that the
    "Frobnicate this file" check box in Frederico's example screenshot is part
    of the default UI! <em>Please engage brain before posting</em>. What would
    "frobnicating" do to a document I opened in gedit? In galeon? Did you ever
    consider the possibility that this widget is an example of an extra widget
    the developer can add to the file selector?
  </p>
  <h2>Volume and Showdesktop Icons</h2>
  <p>
    Honestly, compared against some of the bugs in GNOME this is laughable.
    Extract the patch from Red Hat, and file it as a bug upstream. It will
    probably be applied. Not Hard Work.
  </p>
  <h2>Development Tools</h2>
  <p>
    "Glade is junk, end of story" -- Eugenia. Right.  Personally I consider
    Glade to be a wonderful interface designer, and makes coding GTK+ interfaces
    trivial.  I hope this isn't referring to the "Generate Source" button in
    Glade, which is generally considered to be A Bad Idea when using C.
  </p>
  <p>
    Personally, I hope that Eclipse's C support will mature and someone
    integrates Glade somehow, even if it is just a button to launch the
    binary. But I'm happy with Glade + libglade + xemacs.
  </p>
  <h2>Copy/Paste still misbehaves after all these years</h2>
  <p>
    File bugs! There is no fundamental reason why copy and paste shouldn't work,
    as is shown by the recent <a
    href="http://gaim.sourceforge.net/sean/clipboard.png">gaim hacking</a> to
    copy right text to/from the gaim chat window into the Evolution composer.
  </p>
  <h2>GConf Editor</h2>
  <p>
    A search button for gconf-editor could be handy, but generally tried looking
    in <tt>/apps/[app-name]</tt>?
  </p>
  <h2>Samba on Nautilus</h2>
  <p>
    GNOME 2.4 I believe had a new <tt>smb:</tt> implementation, and in GNOME 2.6
    it will rock even more.
  </p>
  <h2>Rhythmbox and Totem</h2>
  <p>
    "Use the XMMS visualization plugins" -- not possible. It is impossible to link GTK+ 1.2 and GTK+ 2.x code in the same binary.
  </p>
  <p>
    "Totem ... use either Gstreamer or Xine on the fly" -- why? I'd say that
    everything GStreamer can play, Xine can play. If you want a player for
    everything, use Xine. In the future when GStreamer has the required
    features, we'll all be able to switch over to that instead.
  </p>
  <p>
    "I would like Totem to recognize the file format and show an alert to the
    user "would you like to download from the web these formats and install
    them?" -- Totem already does this when it can, and has done so for a long
    time.
  </p>
  <h2>Epiphany</h2>
  <p>
    The usual minor issues which get blown out of all proportion as
    show-stopping bugs for the entire desktop. File a bug, create a patch, do
    something!
  </p>
  <h2>Text and Video Messaging Integration</h2>
  <p>
    I think the gnomemeeting maintainer covered this one...
  </p>
  <h2>Burning Application</h2>
  <p>
    GNOME the desktop is going towards tools to help end-users. Thus we have
    nautilus-cd-burner which is wonderful for the very common task of "burn
    these files".  I have a patch (honest, I do) for Rhythmbox which lets that
    burn audio CDs from playlists.  I don't see the need for a fully-featured
    100% coverage CD burning tool in the GNOME desktop.
  </p>
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