I've fiddled with Unity some, and now that I've installed it for my lab assistant, I thought I'd give it some use so I could be kinda knowedgable about it.
The question is:
a) whether or not: Unity is more or less efficient in terms of the number of mouse clicks necessary to do common tasks.
b) whether or not: the going to "laucher" and then to the (x number of more applications) in the file system is more efficient that the old gnome system.
b) dash home/ more apps / see 124 results, and mouse down.
a) Please consider the following images. they are two "views" of three documents that are open and the "icon" that indicates such.
Below is one view of three documents, notice that they are "cascaded"
Below is one view of three documents, notice that they are "seperated".
Below is an image of the icon that is in the left "panel" , notice that there is a little fuzzy white triangle on the right side of the icon.
Actually, on the left, not shown in the screeny are three distinct little white lines and on the right is one little white line.
The clicking of either side produces, depending on which little white line one clicks, one of the document views.
To get to document,
a) one has to go to the document icon and click it, and one will get THREE documents.
b) one then has to click the desired document and the three documents go back to the panel and one works on that document.
Notice one does not see the icon for "a document" in the panel, one sees the icon for "word processor", I would "assume" that the reasoning for this is the "activity" mindset.
In the old gnome panel one could click the individual document that was desired, meaning one click to get to the document.
So.... the question that I am posing to the folks of Kubu is whether they think that, in these two instances, the Unity interface is "more efficient" in terms of the number of clicks necessary to do something....
OR are the number of clicks "elsewhere" reduced by the interface so that the "average number of clicks" at the end of several hours of use of the Unity interface is the "same" as the old gnome interface.
Or, is the number of clicks a meaningless exercise in whether it is "good" or "bad".
What say you?
woodsmoke
The question is:
a) whether or not: Unity is more or less efficient in terms of the number of mouse clicks necessary to do common tasks.
b) whether or not: the going to "laucher" and then to the (x number of more applications) in the file system is more efficient that the old gnome system.
b) dash home/ more apps / see 124 results, and mouse down.
a) Please consider the following images. they are two "views" of three documents that are open and the "icon" that indicates such.
Below is one view of three documents, notice that they are "cascaded"
Below is one view of three documents, notice that they are "seperated".
Below is an image of the icon that is in the left "panel" , notice that there is a little fuzzy white triangle on the right side of the icon.
Actually, on the left, not shown in the screeny are three distinct little white lines and on the right is one little white line.
The clicking of either side produces, depending on which little white line one clicks, one of the document views.
To get to document,
a) one has to go to the document icon and click it, and one will get THREE documents.
b) one then has to click the desired document and the three documents go back to the panel and one works on that document.
Notice one does not see the icon for "a document" in the panel, one sees the icon for "word processor", I would "assume" that the reasoning for this is the "activity" mindset.
In the old gnome panel one could click the individual document that was desired, meaning one click to get to the document.
So.... the question that I am posing to the folks of Kubu is whether they think that, in these two instances, the Unity interface is "more efficient" in terms of the number of clicks necessary to do something....
OR are the number of clicks "elsewhere" reduced by the interface so that the "average number of clicks" at the end of several hours of use of the Unity interface is the "same" as the old gnome interface.
Or, is the number of clicks a meaningless exercise in whether it is "good" or "bad".
What say you?
woodsmoke
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