>Jonas wrote:
historically speaking developers are good at creating new development
models, cool features, new and innovative stuff and be the cowboys on
the frontline. One thing that developers has been better and better at
over the years is human interaction, this is still an area that it is
good to have outsiders for (the grandma example) To not only drive the
technical frontline but also the usability.
>
They are the ones to write and merge the code, to decide which idéas go >where. So my
question about statistics is about that, to know if there >are many people not writing
code that actually have any influence about >what goes where.
Hi, I'm new here, but a long-time Fedora user. I think Jonas raised a very valid point
about the needs of the end-user (grandma's) and are they being adequately voiced
within the Fedora community.
I'm an author and book designer, and I could not write a line of code, if it led to a
nightly date with Keira Knightley. (Sorry)
Not that I am disparaging developers, far from it. They are the backbone of the Linux
world, and FOSS! But it is the end-user that actually uses our software: or not. Input
about their needs and habits is vital.
Let me give an example: Fedora 8-KDE, the GIMP spin-off Krita. Great little version except
that it was almost un-usable for a real artist. Why, because the pop-up menu boxes, you
needed to do the work, obstructed the image area. Sometimes, they got so big you
couldn't even see the right scroll-bar. You were forever moving them around; the only
other choice was to turn them all off. They would not slide behind the image window.
That one flaw, in an otherwise great piece of software, ruined my experience and led me to
yum in the Gimp. I imagined, at the time, the developers simply did not realize how such a
thing might effect the whole thing in totality. Probably because they were not artists and
too busy writing code and not doing art. That particular problem was fixed in newer
versions, but the point is still valid. If that one detail happened to a new Fedora user
who was an artist, we might just have drove her back to Daddy Bill.
Please do not think that I am disparaging KDE. KDE rocks my world. Take Ktorrent for
example. What can I say about that beauty, except eternal hugs and kisses to whoever
created it.
Anyway. I realize the code-writers cannot be to theoretical; they are limited by what they
can do and not always by what they would like to do. But marketing is not just about
providing products to a fickle user-audience that knows it has choices and wants to be
pampered. It is vital to create cutting-edge software that people can depend on and work
with. And to do that the code-writers need input from their grandma.
-- w Douglas Berry --
slasherzee(a)fedoraproject.org