Linked by Amjith Ramanujam on Thu 24th Jul 2008 04:32 UTC, submitted by snydeq
Linux Mark Shuttleworth today urged development of Linux models to rival what Apple has done on the desktop and mobile devices. Certainly on the desktop experience, we need to shoot beyond the Mac, but I think it's equally relevant [in] the mobile space, Shuttleworth said, outlining the challenge as figuring out how to deliver a 'crisp and clean' experience, without sacrificing the community process. Key to this will be services-based mechanisms for creating revenue for free software that go beyond advertising, Shuttleworth said, adding that cadence in free software releases spurs innovation, and that a regular release schedule, as well as meaningful ties to Windows, will be essential to fulfilling the vision.
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RE[3]: Comment by Macrat
by Vanders on Thu 24th Jul 2008 07:23 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: Comment by Macrat"
Vanders
Member since:
2005-07-06

Quag7s point is that if the developers use the system differently to how the users use it, the user experience is unlikely to be as smooth as it should be simply because the developers don't understand how things could be improved.

If you spend your whole day on the command line you won't really know how that one little file manager bug you've classed as "Minor" is really an irritating annoyance that ruins everything, for example.

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RE[4]: Comment by Macrat
by RandomGuy on Thu 24th Jul 2008 12:56 in reply to "RE[3]: Comment by Macrat"
RandomGuy Member since:
2006-07-30

Good point!

I mostly use the commandline when I'm moving a lot of files. Come to think of it, I haven't even checked yet, if any graphical filemanager supports copying/moving based on strings with wildcards...
That's one thing I couldn't do without if I were to leave the commandline.

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RE[5]: Comment by Macrat
by StephenBeDoper on Fri 25th Jul 2008 03:31 in reply to "RE[4]: Comment by Macrat"
StephenBeDoper Member since:
2005-07-06

Come to think of it, I haven't even checked yet, if any graphical filemanager supports copying/moving based on strings with wildcards...


That's one of the features that I love about OpenTracker (the BeOS / Haiku filemanager): pressing ctrl-opt-a will bring up a "select" dialogue. You can then type a text string (including wildcards), press enter, and Tracker will select all files in the current folder matching that string.

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