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= Epics with all the Details=
= Epics with all the Details=
* [[Plasma/Next/Plumbing|Plumbing and Underlying Infrastructure]]
* [[Plasma/Next/Plumbing|Plumbing and Underlying Infrastructure]]
* [[Plasma/Next/SessionManagement]]
* [[Plasma/Next/SessionManagement|Session Management]]
* [[Plasma/Next/HardwareExperience]]
* [[Plasma/Next/HardwareExperience|Hardware Experience]]
* [[Plasma/Next/DesktopUI]]
* [[Plasma/Next/DesktopUI|Desktop UI]]
* [[Plasma/Next/Wayland|Wayland]]


= Desktop UX Elegance and Consistency =
= Desktop UX Elegance and Consistency =


Many things are managed by different processes, or even completely different  
Many things are managed by different processes, or even completely different projects (like login manager). But the user doesn't care about that, so the idea is to give it a grand unified look, even if they keep being different things internally. So, the potential places identified, in order of startup are:
projects (like login manager). But the user doesn't care about that, so the  
idea is to give it a grand unified look, even if they keep being different  
things internally. So, the potential places identified, in order of startup  
are:
* Login screen
* Login screen
* Splash
* Splash
Line 19: Line 18:
* Logout screen
* Logout screen


These are all just defaults. We will need a user tweakage UI for Look 'n Feel  
These are all just defaults. We will need a user tweakage UI for Look 'n Feel component settings and such things.
component settings and such things.


 
We discussed ways to bring some visual and behavior consistency to these different things, e.g. all modal parts really ought to look and work exactly the same way so they feel continuous. So some things in the workspace ui are a modal, interrupting thing like the login screen, the splash, the lockscreen, the user switching the logout dialog. Other things are non-modal like activity switching; some are semi-modal like Alt+Tab (semi-modal -> strictly speaking they are modal, but they are features to aid the user through transitions and so it doesn't actually block workflow). This part of plasma2 is our opportunity to rethink how some of the core UX components are presented. We will consolidate different pieces of the user experience into [[Plasma/lookAndFeelPackage|Look & Feel Packages]] in order to share visual concepts.
We discussed ways to bring some visual and behavior consistency to these different things, e.g. all modal parts really ought to look and work exactly the same way so they feel continuous. So some things in the workspace ui are a modal, interrupting thing like the login screen, the splash, the lockscreen, the user switching the logout dialog. Other things are non-modal like activity switching; some are semi-modal like Alt+Tab (semi-modal -> strictly speaking they are modal, but they are features to aid the user through transitions and so it doesn't actually block workflow). This part of plasma2 is our opportunity to rethink how some of the core UX components are presented


Improved the session management process
Improved the session management process
Line 37: Line 34:
= Time Based Goals =
= Time Based Goals =


~Quarterly milestone releases with public communication (blogs and announcements) and tarballs
This part of our planning has been detailed in the [http://techbase.kde.org/Schedules/Plasma/2014.6_Release_Schedule release schedule].
 
* Mid-December 2013
** "Proof of Life" technology demonstration release
** Dogfoodable
** Basic functionality in place, then we can tackle UI and new concepts from there
** Hardware experience
 
* EOM March 2014
** Technology demonstration release 2
** Wayland session
** Look 'n Feel package support implemented in all affected components
** Session management and startup++, kded4 / ksmserver / etc


* EOM June 2014:
** The UX as we imagine it (yes, vague, we have a lot of definitional work to do there)
       


= Project Management Framework =
= Project Management Framework =
Line 74: Line 56:
* research into tools to replace wiki-based lists
* research into tools to replace wiki-based lists
** PW2Todo becomes the todo list that feeds from the PM we document together
** PW2Todo becomes the todo list that feeds from the PM we document together
=Splash Screen (Example) =
The following is an example element description for one of the functional elements.
== Goal ==
The splash should hide visual noise during loading of the workspace from the user and shorten the experienced time until the desktop is up. This process should be visually seamless without jumping background images, smoothly blending from the login manager disappearing until the workspace is loaded and usable.
== Epics ==
* Look and Feel Package: QML bits are shared here
* Desktop elegance: Splash is an important part of first impression
* Session management process: splash as part of the login process
== Integration Story ==
The splash screen is brought up by the login manager. It loads QML files from the Look and Feel package to provide visual coherence. Once the desktop is loaded, the splashscreen disappears.
== Porting status ==
A basic port to QML is on reviewboard, it needs to be integrated with the login manager, and its QML bits need moving into the L&F package.
== Roadmap ==
* Merge patch (ongoing right now)
* until 15 November:
** move QML bits into L&F package
** investigate and draft plan with SDDM developers
* until end November
** implement changes in SDDM
* Review and iterate
== Maintainer ==
* Martin Klapetek (mck182)

Latest revision as of 04:26, 17 December 2022

Note

This page has old content. See page history.


Epics with all the Details

Desktop UX Elegance and Consistency

Many things are managed by different processes, or even completely different projects (like login manager). But the user doesn't care about that, so the idea is to give it a grand unified look, even if they keep being different things internally. So, the potential places identified, in order of startup are:

  • Login screen
  • Splash
  • Some Kwin effect, such as Alt+Tab
  • Lock screen
  • Fast user switching
  • Logout screen

These are all just defaults. We will need a user tweakage UI for Look 'n Feel component settings and such things.

We discussed ways to bring some visual and behavior consistency to these different things, e.g. all modal parts really ought to look and work exactly the same way so they feel continuous. So some things in the workspace ui are a modal, interrupting thing like the login screen, the splash, the lockscreen, the user switching the logout dialog. Other things are non-modal like activity switching; some are semi-modal like Alt+Tab (semi-modal -> strictly speaking they are modal, but they are features to aid the user through transitions and so it doesn't actually block workflow). This part of plasma2 is our opportunity to rethink how some of the core UX components are presented. We will consolidate different pieces of the user experience into Look & Feel Packages in order to share visual concepts.

Improved the session management process

During Tokamak6 in March, we put the options for the startup procedure on the table, and realized that we have 4 unsatisfying solutions: startkde, startactive, systemk, and systemd scripts.

Goals for the Startup:

  • fast startup (as few processes as possible, minimal set of actions, highest performance options)
  • respect dependencies between components (component B requires A, so start component A before B)
  • seamless (no resolution changes visible, no shifting wallpapers)
  • declarative (easy to extend/improve, not tied to a single system)

Time Based Goals

This part of our planning has been detailed in the release schedule.


Project Management Framework

  • We identify the main component domains for plasma 2 (e.g. "hardware experience") and ensure there is at least one coordinator for each (e.g. afiestas for "hardware experience")
  • We've actually already identified the main components when we did that big listing. the lists are the sub-components, the headings are the main components
  • That coordinator (or 2) ensures that all of the sub-components in the domain they coordinate has an acknowledge maintainer for the plasma2 development effort
  • If there is a maintainer missing, we need to mark that down as well
  • For each domain component (e.g. "screen savers" in "desktop UI"), the maintainer needs to develop two stories:
    • the porting story -> what needs to be done to make it awesome on Qt5/FW5
    • the goals story -> how does work that is being done (or needs to be done) meet each of the 3 epic goals we have

This will let us all know where we are individually heading and provide input without having to have giant meetings like this one constantly

  • The coordinator for each domain will work with the people working on that code to develop and document a time based plan that matches the milestone goals

This will let us know when we should be able to expect things, identify when things need more people working on them (because they aren't meeting their goals)

  • Some time goals won't be known right away, and that's ok; those components can be marked with "time unknown" or "defered, waiting on <whatever is blocking>"
  • 2 people will co-maintain a project management position that oversees the entire documentation process, prodding people where necessary, working with coordinators to complete their areas, and then making sure that there is a global consistency to the planning
  • sebas and aseigo take on overall coordination
  • research into tools to replace wiki-based lists
    • PW2Todo becomes the todo list that feeds from the PM we document together

Splash Screen (Example)

The following is an example element description for one of the functional elements.

Goal

The splash should hide visual noise during loading of the workspace from the user and shorten the experienced time until the desktop is up. This process should be visually seamless without jumping background images, smoothly blending from the login manager disappearing until the workspace is loaded and usable.

Epics

  • Look and Feel Package: QML bits are shared here
  • Desktop elegance: Splash is an important part of first impression
  • Session management process: splash as part of the login process

Integration Story

The splash screen is brought up by the login manager. It loads QML files from the Look and Feel package to provide visual coherence. Once the desktop is loaded, the splashscreen disappears.

Porting status

A basic port to QML is on reviewboard, it needs to be integrated with the login manager, and its QML bits need moving into the L&F package.

Roadmap

  • Merge patch (ongoing right now)
  • until 15 November:
    • move QML bits into L&F package
    • investigate and draft plan with SDDM developers
  • until end November
    • implement changes in SDDM
  • Review and iterate

Maintainer

  • Martin Klapetek (mck182)