Linux is a multi-workspace operating system and this has to be considered on designing features.
Assume the following as one of examples:
- the user has set up a number of workspaces
- a nautilus window exists on two or more workspaces
This design decision then makes it very hard to find those nautilus windows located on other workspaces without having to:
- manually browse through all workspaces
- click the launcher folder button each time (window could be hidden)
Not really a user friendly way of working.
There are ways to solve this deficiency, e.g:
- make it configurable
- combine it with a key
- revert this decision
So what I'm trying to state here is that features like this one must consider the fact that Linux is a multi-workspace operating system.
Agree upon that this really is a poor decision.
Linux is a multi-workspace operating system and this has to be considered on designing features.
Assume the following as one of examples:
- the user has set up a number of workspaces
- a nautilus window exists on two or more workspaces
This design decision then makes it very hard to find those nautilus windows located on other workspaces without having to:
- manually browse through all workspaces
- click the launcher folder button each time (window could be hidden)
Not really a user friendly way of working.
There are ways to solve this deficiency, e.g:
- make it configurable
- combine it with a key
- revert this decision
So what I'm trying to state here is that features like this one must consider the fact that Linux is a multi-workspace operating system.