On Wed, Nov 1, 2017 at 7:36 PM, FERNANDO FREDIANI <fernando.frediani(a)upx.com
wrote:
Agreed. Otherwise it would apply 'one size fits all' as
mentioned and that
is not the case.
Applying guidelines is something very good to do, by removing stuff that
may only be 'recent trend' or 'buzz stuff' considering the audience that
will use it is even better practice. I don't think oVirt Admins can be
considered masses in that sense.
Has anyone seen a NOC or Operating Center using Tablets or Mobile Phones
to manage their infrastructure ? No, they use Desktops/Laptops and a Mouse
;-)
In all the cool television show they have a tablet ;-)
Seriously though, today more and more laptops have a touch-sensitive
screen. And a long press is equal to right click and I do find it
comfortable to have.
I didn't know GMail had a right click-menu, but since I've learned about
it, I've been using it and finding it handy (even though the buttons are
just on top and not far away from the email list).
Y.
Fernando
On 01/11/2017 13:25, Robert Story wrote:
> On Tue 2017-10-31 19:57:32+0200 Oved wrote:
>
>> As mentioned earlier, this is one motivation but not the only one.
>> You see right click less and less in web applications, as it isn't
>> considered a good user experience. This is also the patternfly
>> guideline (patternfly is a framework we heavily use throughout the
>> application).
>>
> Their user guideline is probably based on UI for the masses. I'd argue
> that oVirt, particularly the admin portal, is for a much more
> technical audience. I think right-click should stay for admin portal.
>
> Users are more likely to be less technical. I'd care much less if
> everything in the user portal had its own button or was in a menu list.
>
>
>
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