On Sat, 2007-11-24 at 17:59 -0600, Billie Walsh wrote:
Kevin Dupuy wrote:
On Nov 24, 2007, at 6:51 AM, Billie Walsh wrote:
Thomas Goettlicher wrote:
Hi everyone,
we want to redesign the YaST Control Center. Therefore we are looking for a radical new design.
I agree with everyone else. It doesn't need a "complete" redesign. A few tweaks maybe, but not a whole new design. It's functional. It works. And even a NOOB can figure out what the heck does what. I did with my first install of SuSE 9.0, AND without asking any mailing list.
I don't know how competent you were with a computer with SUSE 9.0. I remember using 9.0, and (the QT based YaST, anyway) was exactly the same. The number of YaST modules has gone up, the things YaST can do has gone up, and for a new user it can be very confusing!
SuSE 9.0 was the first time I ever worked on anything other than DOS/Windows. On the other hand I had used about everything from about DOS 3/Windows 1 up through Win ME then XP. My first PC was an 8088XT. My first computer was a TI 99/4A then a CoCo.
What the heck is so confusing about "Software" in the left panel and "Software Management", "Online Update", etc in the right. OR, "Hardware" in left panel and "TV Card", Mouse", Keyboard", etc in the right.
When you open a module in YaST you get hints in the left panel to what needs to be put in the right panel. IMHO, these could use a little touching up but they are there.
It appears to me that just about everything in YaST is pretty much self explanatory.
Okay... so, as an example, in Yast > Network Services > NIS Server. How does that become self-explanatory to someone who has never heard of NIS before? Even further... Click on Help in the NIS Server module and the following message comes up: "Select whether to configure the NIS server as a master or a slave or not to configure a NIS server." Again, how is this self-explanatory? That's the point some of us are trying to make. There should be at least a brief explanation to the purpose of a module's services. -- ---Bryen--- -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org