On Tue, Sep 17, 2013 at 10:01:50AM -0400, Bastien Nocera wrote:
I think you missed the part of the thread where I mentioned how the current behaviour was necessary.
You did say that, but I'm not buying it.
You said that it's necessary as a key-lock. I'm sure there are other ways to solve that which provide a less confusing user experience. And, in fact, it doesn't actually do what you say it is for -- keypresses go right through to the password screen. Ironically, the only thing which doesn't clear the shield are the modifier keys traditionally used to wake a system without causing problems (shift, ctrl, alt).
Furthermore, did notice that the Windows article you linked to is called "worst Windows irritations". Are we really at the point where we're bragging about having the same irritations as Windows? (And apparently that while Windows has an option to disable the behavior we rely on buggy third-party extensions?) I don't think you really mean that, do you?
Furthermore, while having a good experience on touch devices will become more important as touch-enabled laptops become mainstream, I really don't see that as the primary target for Fedora Desktop for a while now.
I think it's time for a redesign. I'm not a UI designer so I'm not going to pretend to prescribe the details, but as it stands now, it's really not great. If an upstream redesign isn't in the near future, let's make it right for our users now.
Installing and *enabling* extensions by default in Fedora, and deviating from upstream isn't something we'd consider.
You're mistaken here. It's definitely something we can consider.