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This article is supposed to mark out some of the deficiencies in the Evolution UI. It has been requested Ubuntu switch to Thunderbird. It seems this is for usability reasons. Mark Shuttleworth has declared looks and usability as a feature. Less people will use software that does not look and feel well. The opposite is also true, take Apple as an example. Therefore, developers, please put UI improvements on high priority. Let's here collect possible improvements of the UI and hope for a lively discussion.

Toolbars and Buttons

General Appearance

  Image:Unnecessary.jpg|Current state
  Image:nautilus-tree.jpg|Nautilus ("Orte")
  Image:rhythmbox-tree.jpg|Rhythmbox ("Quelle") </gallery>

Mail

(This Appears to be fixed as of 2.9.2 Except for the initial change of the status bar --Cameron Kellough)

Calendar View

<gallery>

 Image:Cal-1.png|current state
 Image:Cal-2.png|resized font 
 Image:Cal-3.png|keep worktime visible </gallery>   -- [tac]

The current flags are very difficult to discern for colour blind users. Where possible flags should have different shapes and not just different colours. For example, I have modified my own followup-done flag to look like this: http://www.go-evolution.org/images/4/4b/Stock_mail-flag-for-followup-done.png

EvolutionTasks.png

What this view doesn't let me see is which of the gray tasks are between their start and due date (i.e. should be in progress), and which ones have not yet reached their start date. In the example above, the 3rd task is actually past its start date already, whereas the 4th one has not yet reached its start date, but I can't see this from the colours. As a result it's hard to know which task I should get started on today, especially when tasks in general are multi-day (or week) tasks such as the ones in the example above.

SOLUTION: use another colour to indicate that a task is on or after its start date but not yet its due date. I suggest green, as in the example below. Really nice would be to vary the colour intensity as the task approaches its due date, as is done with the past-due tasks already.

EvolutionTasksImproved.png --Robertb 22:30, 13 April 2008 (MDT)

Contacts

Views

4/19/2009 I just tried the Evolution 2.24 for Windows and am impressed at the progress made. Before it was no better than Outlook Express and a far cry from Outlook. Now you are getting closer. But portability is a big problem. Second, full addresses do not port over. But I think the biggest problem I see immediately is the poor Contact Form for editing. Take a look at an Outlook Contact Form and you will see that all pertinent information including notes is on the front tab. In fact, I never have to look at the other tabs. There is just no excuse for basic information to be over 3 tabs and not easy to see. Also, the notes section is pitifully small unless you make the contact form grandiously large. Finally there should be a link to dial the phone number through the contact form via the modem on the computer. This is very handy for myself, as I do not have to physically dial numbers, I can just choose which one I want on the Contact Form and click on the Dial icon.

Also, on Show Fields, why can't you choose business address for the list view?

Preferences

The preferences window is confusing, mainly because it contains the settings for all components. A long-term solution would be to separate the components into their own applications with their own preferences windows.

Mail Accounts

Certificates

Autocompletion

 NOTE: This all is a stub. Will expand with examples and suggestions.

Usability Changes

I would add this to the UI discussion as well as not only looks but having an intuative interface for users is hugely important. (this has been moved from discussion)

All of these suggestions are based around my use of Evolution 2.8.3 as primary mail client in a non IT, office based organisation and rolling it out to non technical staff. Some of these may or may not be feasible but are desirable from an end user perspective.

Compose mail

*** My evolution only gives me the option to do that on reply which doesn't suit my industry (recruitment) - I reply to hundreds of emails a week that I will never email again. There are however alot of people who don't send many emails to me but I have to send to them.... I would like it to be able to add an email address that I type in manually. (at the moment I go through my sent items to add to contacts) -- Kye Macdonald 8:35, 4 April 2007

Few more

-- Kye Macdonald


2024-10-23 10:58