2010-03-31 23:01:17 |
Bálint Magyar |
bug |
|
|
added bug |
2010-03-31 23:01:17 |
Bálint Magyar |
attachment added |
|
Why_autoexpanding_indicators_are_a_bad_idea.png http://launchpadlibrarian.net/42732636/Why_autoexpanding_indicators_are_a_bad_idea.png |
|
2010-03-31 23:01:17 |
Bálint Magyar |
attachment added |
|
Dependencies.txt http://launchpadlibrarian.net/42731591/Dependencies.txt |
|
2010-04-01 17:43:03 |
Sense Egbert Hofstede |
description |
Binary package hint: indicator-application
Application indicators are tiny buttons that spawn wide menus. Since other indicator menus autoexpand if the cursor hovers over another indicator (much like regular window menus), the previous menu disappears. This is not THAT big of a problem (although I would argue that it still is one) with regular window menus because most items are wider than a single icon. However where this becomes REALLY prominent and annoying is indicator-sound, because chances are a user clicks the applet most of the time to set the volume. I think it's safe to assume that most of the time the volume is not zero, which means the slider is way over the boundary created by the indicator icon. I have excellent hand-eye coordination and even I have sometimes found myself struggling with the applet, accidentally expanding the message indicator menu several times before being able to adjust the volume, because the optimal path for my cursor movement crosses the menu item boundary on the right side. (See attached screenshot.)
I think a good solution would be to introduce a slight delay (no more than a few hundred milliseconds) before a neighboring indicator applet menu gets autoexpanded.
In the long run, this could be given some thought with regards to regular menu items as well. Could the delay work? Or would making all menu items wider within the theme be a more feasible workaround? I think this would deserve some actual usability testing time.
ProblemType: Bug
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 10.04
Package: indicator-application 0.0.18-0ubuntu1
ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 2.6.32-18.27-generic 2.6.32.10+drm33.1
Uname: Linux 2.6.32-18-generic i686
Architecture: i386
Date: Thu Apr 1 00:43:59 2010
EcryptfsInUse: Yes
ProcEnviron:
PATH=(custom, user)
LANG=en_US.utf8
SHELL=/bin/bash
SourcePackage: indicator-application |
Binary package hint: indicator-application
Application Indicators are tiny icons with large menus. When you've opened one such menu you can browse through the others simply by moving your mouse of the other icons.
However, this does cause problems when you quickly want to go to one of the menu items. As illustrated in the attached screenshot you often go over neighbouring icons. This closes the menu with the menu item you were planning to click and opens the other.
A solution would be to use a timer for the 'auto-expanding' feature.
From an IRC conversation on this bug:
"<bratsche> Okay, so gtk+ has something internal called (I think) a stay-up triangle.. but as far as I know, it's only used when dealing with submenus from a menu.
But try to envision a menu with several menuitems, and the first menuitem has a submenu with several menuitems. Your mouse is currently over the top menuitem of the parent menu and the submenu from it is open to the right.
Now when you move the mouse toward say the middle of that submenu, you'll probably mouse-over a menuitem below the current one in the parent menu..
But there are two things that can keep it from becoming the active menuitem.. a timer, and this stay-up triangle.
<bratsche> Anyway, we should think about this some. Indicator icons are small enough that in the case of indicator-sound, going to all the trouble of duplicating this stay-up triangle might be more trouble than it's worth. Judging by the screenshot in qense's bug, the stay-up triangle would cover most the majority of the neighboring indicator icon anyway, so maybe a simple timer would be enough."
ProblemType: Bug
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 10.04
Package: indicator-application 0.0.18-0ubuntu1
ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 2.6.32-18.27-generic 2.6.32.10+drm33.1
Uname: Linux 2.6.32-18-generic i686
Architecture: i386
Date: Thu Apr 1 00:43:59 2010
EcryptfsInUse: Yes
ProcEnviron:
PATH=(custom, user)
LANG=en_US.utf8
SHELL=/bin/bash
SourcePackage: indicator-application
|
|
2010-04-01 17:44:35 |
Sense Egbert Hofstede |
indicator-application (Ubuntu): importance |
Undecided |
Low |
|
2010-04-01 17:44:35 |
Sense Egbert Hofstede |
indicator-application (Ubuntu): status |
New |
Triaged |
|
2010-04-01 17:44:55 |
Sense Egbert Hofstede |
bug task added |
|
indicator-application |
|
2010-04-01 17:45:47 |
Sense Egbert Hofstede |
indicator-application: status |
New |
Confirmed |
|
2010-04-01 17:46:13 |
Sense Egbert Hofstede |
summary |
Autoexpanding indicator menus hurt usability |
Auto-expanding AppIndicator menus makes navigating to menu items harder |
|
2010-05-21 15:52:14 |
Ted Gould |
indicator-application: status |
Confirmed |
Invalid |
|
2010-05-21 15:53:09 |
Ted Gould |
affects |
indicator-application (Ubuntu) |
gtk+2.0 (Ubuntu) |
|
2010-05-21 15:53:28 |
Ted Gould |
gtk+2.0 (Ubuntu): assignee |
|
Cody Russell (bratsche) |
|
2010-08-25 10:32:43 |
Sebastien Bacher |
removed subscriber Canonical Desktop Team |
|
|
|
2010-12-02 13:46:56 |
Matthew Paul Thomas |
description |
Binary package hint: indicator-application
Application Indicators are tiny icons with large menus. When you've opened one such menu you can browse through the others simply by moving your mouse of the other icons.
However, this does cause problems when you quickly want to go to one of the menu items. As illustrated in the attached screenshot you often go over neighbouring icons. This closes the menu with the menu item you were planning to click and opens the other.
A solution would be to use a timer for the 'auto-expanding' feature.
From an IRC conversation on this bug:
"<bratsche> Okay, so gtk+ has something internal called (I think) a stay-up triangle.. but as far as I know, it's only used when dealing with submenus from a menu.
But try to envision a menu with several menuitems, and the first menuitem has a submenu with several menuitems. Your mouse is currently over the top menuitem of the parent menu and the submenu from it is open to the right.
Now when you move the mouse toward say the middle of that submenu, you'll probably mouse-over a menuitem below the current one in the parent menu..
But there are two things that can keep it from becoming the active menuitem.. a timer, and this stay-up triangle.
<bratsche> Anyway, we should think about this some. Indicator icons are small enough that in the case of indicator-sound, going to all the trouble of duplicating this stay-up triangle might be more trouble than it's worth. Judging by the screenshot in qense's bug, the stay-up triangle would cover most the majority of the neighboring indicator icon anyway, so maybe a simple timer would be enough."
ProblemType: Bug
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 10.04
Package: indicator-application 0.0.18-0ubuntu1
ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 2.6.32-18.27-generic 2.6.32.10+drm33.1
Uname: Linux 2.6.32-18-generic i686
Architecture: i386
Date: Thu Apr 1 00:43:59 2010
EcryptfsInUse: Yes
ProcEnviron:
PATH=(custom, user)
LANG=en_US.utf8
SHELL=/bin/bash
SourcePackage: indicator-application
|
gtk 2.22, Ubuntu 10.10
1. Click on the volume control to open the sound menu.
2. Move the pointer diagonally to click on the maximum volume button.
What often happens: The sound menu closes, and the menu next to it opens.
Screnshot: https://launchpadlibrarian.net/42732636/Why_autoexpanding_indicators_are_a_bad_idea.png
Screencast: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVUokjAlREs>
What should happen: The sound menu stays open.
A solution would be to use a timer for the 'auto-expanding' feature.
From an IRC conversation on this bug:
"<bratsche> Okay, so gtk+ has something internal called (I think) a stay-up triangle.. but as far as I know, it's only used when dealing with submenus from a menu.
But try to envision a menu with several menuitems, and the first menuitem has a submenu with several menuitems. Your mouse is currently over the top menuitem of the parent menu and the submenu from it is open to the right.
Now when you move the mouse toward say the middle of that submenu, you'll probably mouse-over a menuitem below the current one in the parent menu..
But there are two things that can keep it from becoming the active menuitem.. a timer, and this stay-up triangle.
<bratsche> Anyway, we should think about this some. Indicator icons are small enough that in the case of indicator-sound, going to all the trouble of duplicating this stay-up triangle might be more trouble than it's worth. Judging by the screenshot in qense's bug, the stay-up triangle would cover most the majority of the neighboring indicator icon anyway, so maybe a simple timer would be enough."
Illustration of the invisible triangle for submenus:
<http://www.quinn.echidna.id.au/Quinn/WWW/HISubtleties/HierarchicalMenus.html>
Discussion of the invisible triangle for submenus in GTK:
<http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2000-May/msg00118.html> |
|
2010-12-02 13:48:00 |
Matthew Paul Thomas |
summary |
Auto-expanding AppIndicator menus makes navigating to menu items harder |
Moving diagonally from narrow menu title often opens adjacent menu |
|
2010-12-04 17:39:29 |
Vish |
affects |
indicator-application |
hundredpapercuts |
|
2010-12-04 17:39:29 |
Vish |
hundredpapercuts: status |
Invalid |
New |
|
2010-12-04 17:42:40 |
Vish |
hundredpapercuts: importance |
Undecided |
Low |
|
2010-12-04 17:42:40 |
Vish |
hundredpapercuts: status |
New |
Triaged |
|
2010-12-04 17:42:40 |
Vish |
hundredpapercuts: milestone |
|
nt7-potpourri |
|
2010-12-04 17:42:59 |
Vish |
hundredpapercuts: assignee |
|
Papercuts Ninja (papercuts-ninja) |
|
2010-12-04 19:30:51 |
Mohamed Amine Ilidrissi |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Mohamed Amine IL Idrissi |
2010-12-13 06:25:58 |
David |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber David |
2010-12-13 10:13:47 |
Omer Akram |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Omer Akram |
2010-12-13 15:23:06 |
Jeremy Nickurak |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Jeremy Nickurak |
2010-12-15 11:30:39 |
Paul Sladen |
description |
gtk 2.22, Ubuntu 10.10
1. Click on the volume control to open the sound menu.
2. Move the pointer diagonally to click on the maximum volume button.
What often happens: The sound menu closes, and the menu next to it opens.
Screnshot: https://launchpadlibrarian.net/42732636/Why_autoexpanding_indicators_are_a_bad_idea.png
Screencast: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVUokjAlREs>
What should happen: The sound menu stays open.
A solution would be to use a timer for the 'auto-expanding' feature.
From an IRC conversation on this bug:
"<bratsche> Okay, so gtk+ has something internal called (I think) a stay-up triangle.. but as far as I know, it's only used when dealing with submenus from a menu.
But try to envision a menu with several menuitems, and the first menuitem has a submenu with several menuitems. Your mouse is currently over the top menuitem of the parent menu and the submenu from it is open to the right.
Now when you move the mouse toward say the middle of that submenu, you'll probably mouse-over a menuitem below the current one in the parent menu..
But there are two things that can keep it from becoming the active menuitem.. a timer, and this stay-up triangle.
<bratsche> Anyway, we should think about this some. Indicator icons are small enough that in the case of indicator-sound, going to all the trouble of duplicating this stay-up triangle might be more trouble than it's worth. Judging by the screenshot in qense's bug, the stay-up triangle would cover most the majority of the neighboring indicator icon anyway, so maybe a simple timer would be enough."
Illustration of the invisible triangle for submenus:
<http://www.quinn.echidna.id.au/Quinn/WWW/HISubtleties/HierarchicalMenus.html>
Discussion of the invisible triangle for submenus in GTK:
<http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2000-May/msg00118.html> |
gtk 2.22, Ubuntu 10.10
1. Click on the volume control to open the sound menu.
2. Move the pointer diagonally to click on the maximum volume button.
What often happens: The sound menu closes, and the menu next to it opens.
Screnshot: https://launchpadlibrarian.net/42732636/Why_autoexpanding_indicators_are_a_bad_idea.png
Screencast: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVUokjAlREs>
What should happen: The sound menu stays open.
A solution would be to use a timer for the 'auto-expanding' feature.
From an IRC conversation on this bug:
"<bratsche> Okay, so gtk+ has something internal called (I think) a stay-up triangle.. but as far as I know, it's only used when dealing with submenus from a menu.
But try to envision a menu with several menuitems, and the first menuitem has a submenu with several menuitems. Your mouse is currently over the top menuitem of the parent menu and the submenu from it is open to the right.
Now when you move the mouse toward say the middle of that submenu, you'll probably mouse-over a menuitem below the current one in the parent menu..
But there are two things that can keep it from becoming the active menuitem.. a timer, and this stay-up triangle.
<bratsche> Anyway, we should think about this some. Indicator icons are small enough that in the case of indicator-sound, going to all the trouble of duplicating this stay-up triangle might be more trouble than it's worth. Judging by the screenshot in qense's bug, the stay-up triangle would cover most the majority of the neighboring indicator icon anyway, so maybe a simple timer would be enough."
Illustration of the invisible triangle for submenus:
<http://www.quinn.echidna.id.au/Quinn/WWW/HISubtleties/HierarchicalMenus.html>
Discussion of the invisible triangle for submenus in GTK:
<http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2000-May/msg00118.html>
Gtk+ already has triangular bounding boxes for sub-menus. This code should also be applied to the top-level and not just the sub-menus. |
|
2011-03-24 11:14:31 |
Robert Roth |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Robert Roth |
2011-08-22 20:41:43 |
Omer Akram |
bug task added |
|
gtk+3.0 (Ubuntu) |
|
2011-08-22 20:45:23 |
Omer Akram |
bug task added |
|
unity |
|
2011-08-22 20:47:03 |
Launchpad Janitor |
gtk+3.0 (Ubuntu): status |
New |
Confirmed |
|
2011-08-22 22:28:08 |
Yann Dìnendal |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Yann Dìnendal |
2011-09-06 11:54:23 |
Omer Akram |
unity: importance |
Undecided |
Medium |
|
2011-09-06 11:54:26 |
Omer Akram |
unity: status |
New |
Triaged |
|
2011-09-06 11:54:31 |
Omer Akram |
gtk+2.0 (Ubuntu): assignee |
Cody Russell (bratsche) |
|
|
2011-09-06 11:54:41 |
Omer Akram |
gtk+3.0 (Ubuntu): importance |
Undecided |
Low |
|
2011-09-06 11:54:44 |
Omer Akram |
gtk+3.0 (Ubuntu): status |
Confirmed |
Triaged |
|
2011-09-30 15:02:39 |
Didier Roche-Tolomelli |
unity (Ubuntu): status |
New |
Triaged |
|
2011-10-05 08:59:52 |
Marcus Sundman |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Marcus Sundman |
2012-02-09 18:34:42 |
Omer Akram |
unity (Ubuntu): importance |
Undecided |
Medium |
|
2012-04-03 10:12:53 |
Thibaut Brandscheid |
tags |
apport-bug i386 lucid |
apport-bug i386 precise ux |
|
2012-06-07 02:27:00 |
Arthur Tan |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Arthur Tan |
2012-06-07 07:48:50 |
Andrea Corbellini |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Andrea Corbellini |
2012-06-07 22:21:52 |
manny |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber manny |
2012-08-17 16:51:58 |
Edward Donovan |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Edward Donovan |
2012-11-28 22:34:34 |
Chris Wilson |
hundredpapercuts: milestone |
nt7-potpourri |
raring-gtk |
|
2012-12-06 17:42:12 |
Matthew Paul Thomas |
description |
gtk 2.22, Ubuntu 10.10
1. Click on the volume control to open the sound menu.
2. Move the pointer diagonally to click on the maximum volume button.
What often happens: The sound menu closes, and the menu next to it opens.
Screnshot: https://launchpadlibrarian.net/42732636/Why_autoexpanding_indicators_are_a_bad_idea.png
Screencast: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVUokjAlREs>
What should happen: The sound menu stays open.
A solution would be to use a timer for the 'auto-expanding' feature.
From an IRC conversation on this bug:
"<bratsche> Okay, so gtk+ has something internal called (I think) a stay-up triangle.. but as far as I know, it's only used when dealing with submenus from a menu.
But try to envision a menu with several menuitems, and the first menuitem has a submenu with several menuitems. Your mouse is currently over the top menuitem of the parent menu and the submenu from it is open to the right.
Now when you move the mouse toward say the middle of that submenu, you'll probably mouse-over a menuitem below the current one in the parent menu..
But there are two things that can keep it from becoming the active menuitem.. a timer, and this stay-up triangle.
<bratsche> Anyway, we should think about this some. Indicator icons are small enough that in the case of indicator-sound, going to all the trouble of duplicating this stay-up triangle might be more trouble than it's worth. Judging by the screenshot in qense's bug, the stay-up triangle would cover most the majority of the neighboring indicator icon anyway, so maybe a simple timer would be enough."
Illustration of the invisible triangle for submenus:
<http://www.quinn.echidna.id.au/Quinn/WWW/HISubtleties/HierarchicalMenus.html>
Discussion of the invisible triangle for submenus in GTK:
<http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2000-May/msg00118.html>
Gtk+ already has triangular bounding boxes for sub-menus. This code should also be applied to the top-level and not just the sub-menus. |
gtk 2.22, Ubuntu 10.10
1. Click on the volume control to open the sound menu.
2. Move the pointer diagonally to click on the maximum volume button.
What often happens: The sound menu closes, and the menu next to it opens.
Screnshot: https://launchpadlibrarian.net/42732636/Why_autoexpanding_indicators_are_a_bad_idea.png
Screencast: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVUokjAlREs>
Example in an informal usability test: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=PgGbZfR6Vec#t=13m55s>
What should happen: The sound menu stays open.
A solution would be to use a timer for the 'auto-expanding' feature.
From an IRC conversation on this bug:
"<bratsche> Okay, so gtk+ has something internal called (I think) a stay-up triangle.. but as far as I know, it's only used when dealing with submenus from a menu.
But try to envision a menu with several menuitems, and the first menuitem has a submenu with several menuitems. Your mouse is currently over the top menuitem of the parent menu and the submenu from it is open to the right.
Now when you move the mouse toward say the middle of that submenu, you'll probably mouse-over a menuitem below the current one in the parent menu..
But there are two things that can keep it from becoming the active menuitem.. a timer, and this stay-up triangle.
<bratsche> Anyway, we should think about this some. Indicator icons are small enough that in the case of indicator-sound, going to all the trouble of duplicating this stay-up triangle might be more trouble than it's worth. Judging by the screenshot in qense's bug, the stay-up triangle would cover most the majority of the neighboring indicator icon anyway, so maybe a simple timer would be enough."
Illustration of the invisible triangle for submenus:
<http://www.quinn.echidna.id.au/Quinn/WWW/HISubtleties/HierarchicalMenus.html>
Discussion of the invisible triangle for submenus in GTK:
<http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2000-May/msg00118.html>
Gtk+ already has triangular bounding boxes for sub-menus. This code should also be applied to the top-level and not just the sub-menus. |
|
2013-05-13 18:21:25 |
Curtis Hovey |
removed subscriber Registry Administrators |
|
|
|
2014-05-24 17:22:09 |
Alberto Salvia Novella |
hundredpapercuts: assignee |
Papercuts Ninjas (papercuts-ninja) |
|
|
2015-05-05 11:13:32 |
Matthew Paul Thomas |
description |
gtk 2.22, Ubuntu 10.10
1. Click on the volume control to open the sound menu.
2. Move the pointer diagonally to click on the maximum volume button.
What often happens: The sound menu closes, and the menu next to it opens.
Screnshot: https://launchpadlibrarian.net/42732636/Why_autoexpanding_indicators_are_a_bad_idea.png
Screencast: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVUokjAlREs>
Example in an informal usability test: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=PgGbZfR6Vec#t=13m55s>
What should happen: The sound menu stays open.
A solution would be to use a timer for the 'auto-expanding' feature.
From an IRC conversation on this bug:
"<bratsche> Okay, so gtk+ has something internal called (I think) a stay-up triangle.. but as far as I know, it's only used when dealing with submenus from a menu.
But try to envision a menu with several menuitems, and the first menuitem has a submenu with several menuitems. Your mouse is currently over the top menuitem of the parent menu and the submenu from it is open to the right.
Now when you move the mouse toward say the middle of that submenu, you'll probably mouse-over a menuitem below the current one in the parent menu..
But there are two things that can keep it from becoming the active menuitem.. a timer, and this stay-up triangle.
<bratsche> Anyway, we should think about this some. Indicator icons are small enough that in the case of indicator-sound, going to all the trouble of duplicating this stay-up triangle might be more trouble than it's worth. Judging by the screenshot in qense's bug, the stay-up triangle would cover most the majority of the neighboring indicator icon anyway, so maybe a simple timer would be enough."
Illustration of the invisible triangle for submenus:
<http://www.quinn.echidna.id.au/Quinn/WWW/HISubtleties/HierarchicalMenus.html>
Discussion of the invisible triangle for submenus in GTK:
<http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2000-May/msg00118.html>
Gtk+ already has triangular bounding boxes for sub-menus. This code should also be applied to the top-level and not just the sub-menus. |
gtk 2.22, Ubuntu 10.10
1. Click on the volume control to open the sound menu.
2. Move the pointer diagonally to click on the maximum volume button.
<https://launchpadlibrarian.net/42732636/Why_autoexpanding_indicators_are_a_bad_idea.png>
What often happens: The sound menu closes, and the menu next to it opens.
Screencast: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVUokjAlREs>
Example in an informal usability test: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=PgGbZfR6Vec#t=13m55s>
What should happen: The sound menu stays open.
One solution would be to make the volume slider vertical. But this would not work for other menus (like the Bluetooth menu), and would look awkward with other items in the menu.
Another solution would be to use a timer for closing the current menu and opening a new one. This is what Windows does for submenus. But it has the drawback of slowing down browsing, which would be worse for top-level menus than for submenus.
GTK already has a more sophisticated solution for submenus, similar to Mac OS: a triangle based on the corners of the submenu and its parent item, in which there is a much longer delay for closing the submenu and changing the menu selection. <http://www.quinn.echidna.id.au/Quinn/WWW/HISubtleties/HierarchicalMenus.html>
Discussion of the invisible triangle for submenus in GTK:
<http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2000-May/msg00118.html>
However, this feature in Gtk+ has been broken since July 2013. <https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710388> The code, once fixed, should be applied to menu titles as well.
More information: <http://thomaspark.co/2011/10/making-menus-escapable/> |
|
2015-05-05 17:28:40 |
周成瑞 |
removed subscriber Yongzhi Pan |
|
|
|
2015-08-11 15:41:17 |
Andrea Azzarone |
tags |
apport-bug i386 precise ux |
16.04-hit-list apport-bug i386 precise ux |
|
2015-08-11 15:42:54 |
Andrea Azzarone |
unity: status |
Triaged |
In Progress |
|
2015-08-11 15:42:58 |
Andrea Azzarone |
unity (Ubuntu): status |
Triaged |
In Progress |
|
2015-08-11 15:43:03 |
Andrea Azzarone |
unity (Ubuntu): assignee |
|
Andrea Azzarone (azzar1) |
|
2015-08-11 15:43:05 |
Andrea Azzarone |
unity: assignee |
|
Andrea Azzarone (azzar1) |
|
2015-08-11 15:43:07 |
Andrea Azzarone |
unity: milestone |
|
7.3.3 |
|
2015-08-11 16:28:33 |
Launchpad Janitor |
branch linked |
|
lp:~azzar1/unity/lp-552920 |
|
2015-08-11 21:58:22 |
Andrea Azzarone |
tags |
16.04-hit-list apport-bug i386 precise ux |
16.04-hit-list apport-bug i386 precise rls-w-incoming ux |
|
2015-09-21 21:02:44 |
Launchpad Janitor |
unity (Ubuntu): status |
In Progress |
Fix Released |
|
2015-09-22 08:55:18 |
Marco Trevisan (Treviño) |
unity: status |
In Progress |
Fix Committed |
|
2015-10-26 15:44:12 |
Marco Trevisan (Treviño) |
unity: status |
Fix Committed |
Fix Released |
|
2015-10-30 14:24:22 |
Marco Trevisan (Treviño) |
tags |
16.04-hit-list apport-bug i386 precise rls-w-incoming ux |
16.04-hit-list apport-bug i386 precise rls-x-incoming ux |
|
2016-02-15 10:18:16 |
Will Cooke |
tags |
16.04-hit-list apport-bug i386 precise rls-x-incoming ux |
16.04-hit-list apport-bug i386 precise ux |
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