
jeremiah at jeremiahfoster
Nov 1, 2009, 3:35 PM
Post #1 of 1
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Fwd: Why should it be so hard and should I even bother with Extras for fremantle?
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Begin forwarded message: > From: Jeremiah Foster <jeremiah [at] jeremiahfoster> > Date: November 2, 2009 12:35:45 AM GMT+01:00 > To: Andrew Flegg <andrew [at] bleb> > Subject: Re: Why should it be so hard and should I even bother with > Extras for fremantle? > > > On Nov 1, 2009, at 12:55, Andrew Flegg wrote: > >> On Sun, Nov 1, 2009 at 11:35, Graham Cobb <g+770 [at] cobb> wrote: >>> On Sunday 01 November 2009 10:22:00 Andrew Flegg wrote: >> >>> 1) There will end up being a LOT of command line utilities. Over >>> time I would >>> expect a lot of debian utilities to be ported. This will clutter >>> up the >>> Application Manager with things of interest to a tiny number of >>> people. >>> >>> The medium term solution, I think, is to create a new category: >>> user/advanced >>> or user/command-line. >> >> I don't like this. If I'm looking for a port forwarder, I'm going to >> look in user/network and, as an advanced user, I'm going to be happy >> with a pretty GUI app or the command-line socat. >> >> This is probably where we should start looking at introducing >> debtags? >> So, for example, socat would be in user/network but have a tag, >> 'command-line'. We can then even add a setting to Application Manager >> to show/hide command-line applications. > > This makes lots of sense and has been shown to work, although not > every debian app has tags. >> >> This set-up then is an obvious first step on the wider use of >> debtags, >> which will garner us essential experience in how best to use them. (I >> believe it's important that if the user selects one category they see >> one set of apps. I believe it's important that one app appears in one >> category: otherwise the user might not be clear that they're >> successfully navigating from one category to the next if they see the >> same apps cropping up over and over again. I also believe that tags >> could make authors lazy in correctly categorising their applications) > > Power users are often a huge help here because they can categorize > themselves as well. >> >> I've also got a vested interest as a maintainer of the vim port, > > Which I would tag as: not::emacs modal::editor donot::use > > Jeremiah _______________________________________________ maemo-developers mailing list maemo-developers [at] maemo https://lists.maemo.org/mailman/listinfo/maemo-developers
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