Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Wed 30th Jan 2008 09:49 UTC
Linux "My first brush with mouse gestures on the Opera browser was an accident, but the ability to quickly move backward or forward in the browser history, open new windows, close tabs, and more without using the menus or moving the mouse toward the navigation toolbar won me over immediately. Nowadays, this feature is available in Firefox and Konqueror too, and you can even configure mouse gestures for GNOME and KDE desktop environments." More here.
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RE: I don't see the point
by macUser on Wed 30th Jan 2008 21:27 UTC in reply to "I don't see the point"
macUser
Member since:
2006-12-15

There is an application launcher for MOSX that uses gestures to bring up an interface that tries to predict which app you want to launch... You get a few choices as to which apps it thinks you're going to want to use and then it gets out of your way.

After demoing it for a little while, I really didn't find the gesture interface very useful and if anything, it cost me more time than simply right clicking on a dock folder to pop up a list of apps.

If I really don't want to leave the keyboard, I can simply appleKey+spacebar and bring up spotlight, type a few letters and launch my app from there. (I'm sure there are similar tricks in both Windows and Linux)

Also if you're working in 10.5 you can get quicklook to function from the cli. Apps like BBEdit and Textwrangler will also install command line tools so that you can launch them to edit files. What's nice about this is that both BBEdit, Textwrangler and Quicklook all convert binary plist files to text.

Anyways, to get back on topic, I think gesture based interfaces may be better left to fingers and not mice, at least in my limited use of them.

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