Activity log for bug #406438

Date Who What changed Old value New value Message
2009-07-29 15:34:09 David Siegel bug added bug
2009-07-29 15:34:41 David Siegel attachment added Screenshot comparing ~default panel with/without date http://launchpadlibrarian.net/29668723/remove-date.png
2009-07-29 15:36:03 David Siegel description In Karmic, the clock applet shows the date by default. The date is also displayed in the clock applet tooltip, and is visible on click in the calendar applet; all in all, there are three ways to find the date using the clock applet. We should remove one of these ways in the interest of de-cluttering the panel. Current default clock presentation is: Wed Jul 29, 10:28 AM Suggested default: 10:28 AM Again, to see the date, the user can place the cursor over the clock applet and read the tooltip, or she can click on the clock and view the calendar. At a glace, items in the panel should appear clean and simple -- minimalist -- but provide more information when clicked. Users should still be able to turn date display on or off on in the clock applet preferences; we should only change the default preference to not show the date by default. In Karmic, the clock applet shows the date by default. The date is also displayed in the clock applet tooltip, and is visible on click in the calendar applet; all in all, there are three ways to find the date using the clock applet. We should remove one of these ways in the interest of de-cluttering the panel. Current default clock presentation is: Wed Jul 29, 10:28 AM Suggested default: 10:28 AM Again, to see the date, the user can place the cursor over the clock applet and read the tooltip, or she can click on the clock and view the calendar. At a glace, items in the panel should appear clean and simple -- minimalist -- but provide more information when clicked. Users should still be able to turn date display on or off on in the clock applet preferences; we should only change the default preference to not show the date.
2009-07-29 15:47:58 Mat Tomaszewski hundredpapercuts: status New Confirmed
2009-07-29 15:51:56 Mat Tomaszewski hundredpapercuts: importance Undecided Low
2009-07-29 16:21:00 David Siegel hundredpapercuts: milestone round-4
2009-07-29 16:32:42 David Siegel bug task added gnome-panel
2009-07-29 20:17:34 Marcus Carlson attachment added Changes the default setting for viewing the date in the clock applet http://launchpadlibrarian.net/29677777/clock.patch
2009-08-04 13:59:21 David Siegel description In Karmic, the clock applet shows the date by default. The date is also displayed in the clock applet tooltip, and is visible on click in the calendar applet; all in all, there are three ways to find the date using the clock applet. We should remove one of these ways in the interest of de-cluttering the panel. Current default clock presentation is: Wed Jul 29, 10:28 AM Suggested default: 10:28 AM Again, to see the date, the user can place the cursor over the clock applet and read the tooltip, or she can click on the clock and view the calendar. At a glace, items in the panel should appear clean and simple -- minimalist -- but provide more information when clicked. Users should still be able to turn date display on or off on in the clock applet preferences; we should only change the default preference to not show the date. In Karmic, the clock applet shows the date by default. The date is also displayed in the clock applet tooltip, and is visible on click in the calendar applet; all in all, there are three ways to find the date using the clock applet. We should remove one of these ways in the interest of de-cluttering the panel. This is a very subtle change and many people will object at first, but when the option exists to show the date or not show the date, the default option should favor a simpler display, with the user opting-in for the more complex option. It is better to let those who want the date displayed enable it than to require it to be disabled by those who don't need it in the panel. This philosophy of letting the user add complexity rather than creating opportunities to remove complexity from the default configuration is a thread found throughout Ubuntu. For example, the clutter-free default desktop allows users to add icons rather than placing icons there by default to be removed by users who do not need them. Current default clock presentation is: Wed Jul 29, 10:28 AM Suggested default: 10:28 AM Again, to see the date, the user can place the cursor over the clock applet and read the tooltip, or she can click on the clock and view the calendar. At a glace, items in the panel should appear clean and simple -- minimalist -- but provide more information when clicked. Users should still be able to turn date display on or off on in the clock applet preferences; we should only change the default preference to not show the date.
2009-08-04 13:59:57 David Siegel description In Karmic, the clock applet shows the date by default. The date is also displayed in the clock applet tooltip, and is visible on click in the calendar applet; all in all, there are three ways to find the date using the clock applet. We should remove one of these ways in the interest of de-cluttering the panel. This is a very subtle change and many people will object at first, but when the option exists to show the date or not show the date, the default option should favor a simpler display, with the user opting-in for the more complex option. It is better to let those who want the date displayed enable it than to require it to be disabled by those who don't need it in the panel. This philosophy of letting the user add complexity rather than creating opportunities to remove complexity from the default configuration is a thread found throughout Ubuntu. For example, the clutter-free default desktop allows users to add icons rather than placing icons there by default to be removed by users who do not need them. Current default clock presentation is: Wed Jul 29, 10:28 AM Suggested default: 10:28 AM Again, to see the date, the user can place the cursor over the clock applet and read the tooltip, or she can click on the clock and view the calendar. At a glace, items in the panel should appear clean and simple -- minimalist -- but provide more information when clicked. Users should still be able to turn date display on or off on in the clock applet preferences; we should only change the default preference to not show the date. In Karmic, the clock applet shows the date by default. The date is also displayed in the clock applet tooltip, and is visible on click in the calendar applet; all in all, there are three ways to find the date using the clock applet. We should remove one of these ways in the interest of de-cluttering the panel. This is a very subtle change and many people will object at first, but when the option exists to show the date or not show the date, the default configuration should favor a simpler display, with the user opting-in for the more complex option. It is better to let those who want the date displayed enable it than to require it to be disabled by those who don't need it in the panel. This philosophy of letting the user add complexity rather than creating opportunities to remove complexity from the default configuration is a thread found throughout Ubuntu. For example, the clutter-free default desktop allows users to add icons rather than placing icons there by default to be removed by users who do not need them. Current default clock presentation is: Wed Jul 29, 10:28 AM Suggested default: 10:28 AM Again, to see the date, the user can place the cursor over the clock applet and read the tooltip, or she can click on the clock and view the calendar. At a glace, items in the panel should appear clean and simple -- minimalist -- but provide more information when clicked. Users should still be able to turn date display on or off on in the clock applet preferences; we should only change the default preference to not show the date.
2009-08-04 14:01:12 David Siegel summary Panel clock applet should not show the date Panel clock applet should show only the time by default
2009-08-04 18:20:29 Luca Cavalli bug watch added http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=520068
2009-08-04 23:10:53 David Siegel attachment added with-location-set.png http://launchpadlibrarian.net/29911020/with-location-set.png
2009-08-04 23:22:51 David Siegel description In Karmic, the clock applet shows the date by default. The date is also displayed in the clock applet tooltip, and is visible on click in the calendar applet; all in all, there are three ways to find the date using the clock applet. We should remove one of these ways in the interest of de-cluttering the panel. This is a very subtle change and many people will object at first, but when the option exists to show the date or not show the date, the default configuration should favor a simpler display, with the user opting-in for the more complex option. It is better to let those who want the date displayed enable it than to require it to be disabled by those who don't need it in the panel. This philosophy of letting the user add complexity rather than creating opportunities to remove complexity from the default configuration is a thread found throughout Ubuntu. For example, the clutter-free default desktop allows users to add icons rather than placing icons there by default to be removed by users who do not need them. Current default clock presentation is: Wed Jul 29, 10:28 AM Suggested default: 10:28 AM Again, to see the date, the user can place the cursor over the clock applet and read the tooltip, or she can click on the clock and view the calendar. At a glace, items in the panel should appear clean and simple -- minimalist -- but provide more information when clicked. Users should still be able to turn date display on or off on in the clock applet preferences; we should only change the default preference to not show the date. In Karmic, the clock applet shows the date by default. The date is also displayed in the clock applet tooltip, and is visible on click in the calendar applet; all in all, there are three ways to find the date using the clock applet. We should remove one of these ways in the interest of de-cluttering the panel. This is a very subtle change and many people will object at first, but when the option exists to show the date or not show the date, the default configuration should favor a simpler display, with the user opting-in for the more complex option. It is better to let those who want the date displayed enable it than to require it to be disabled by those who don't need it in the panel. This philosophy of letting the user add complexity rather than creating opportunities to remove complexity from the default configuration is a thread found throughout Ubuntu. For example, the clutter-free default desktop allows users to add icons rather than placing icons there by default to be removed by users who do not need them. Current default clock presentation is: Wed Jul 29, 10:28 AM If the location is set in the world clock, the weather ("WEA") and temperature are also shown: WEA 57 °F Wed Jul 29, 10:28 AM Suggested default: 10:28 AM Suggested default if location is set (whether weather or temperature should be shown by default is not being discussed here): WEA 57 °F 10:28 AM Again, to see the date, the user can place the cursor over the clock applet and read the tooltip, or she can click on the clock and view the calendar. At a glace, items in the panel should appear clean and simple -- minimalist -- but provide more information when clicked. Users should still be able to turn date display on or off on in the clock applet preferences; we should only change the default preference to not show the date.
2009-08-05 08:47:33 David Siegel hundredpapercuts: status Confirmed Invalid
2009-08-05 08:50:02 David Siegel bug task added netbook-remix-launcher
2009-08-05 09:41:08 David Siegel hundredpapercuts: milestone round-4
2009-08-14 16:22:33 Neil J. Patel netbook-remix-launcher: importance Undecided Wishlist
2009-08-14 16:22:33 Neil J. Patel netbook-remix-launcher: status New Triaged
2010-03-26 10:34:36 Bryan Quigley removed subscriber Bryan Quigley
2011-04-12 17:10:49 Thanos Lefteris removed subscriber Thanos Lefteris