Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 23rd Dec 2008 20:18 UTC
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Take, as an example of this, Firefox's "Firefox has found updates for some of your extensions" notification.
Steve has discovered that Steve is annoyed by some applications' self-important insistence upon referring to themselves in the third person. ;-)
Edited 2008-12-24 01:09 UTC






Member since:
2005-07-01
What I hate about notifications is the way they seem to become a manifestation of an application's ego. It's as if the developers have decided that their app is so important that the user will want to be notified of every little thing it does.
Take, as an example of this, Firefox's "Firefox has found updates for some of your extensions" notification. This fascinating tidbit of information which is clearly non-critical - I don't know anyone who interrupts their browsing to act on this info - is delivered not using the OS's built in notification system but rather Firefox's own system which crawls above all other apps to interfere with whatever you're doing. At best it's bad manners. In some situations, it can be a downright nuisance.
Usually there's some option somewhere to turn this type of thing off. In practice notifications should all be off by default. The user should have to say "I want to be notified of X, Y and Z", not "Stop bugging me about W".