Multi-Monitor Update and Greeter Prototype
Canonical
on 31 January 2012
Tags: Design , multi-monitor , Multi-screen , prototype , Ubuntu
There are several improvements to the specification (including more elegant discoverability of the Greeter login across displays, improved placement of windows upon removal of a display and a more feasible solution for providing missing resolutions in the Display Preferences panel).
The document has also been restructured in places, with new and extended sections, specifying in further detail how elements such as the Guest Session, Launcher, Spread and mouse cursor should work in a multi-monitor setup.
We have also created a prototype to explore how the Greeter works across multiple displays.
You can check out the prototype by downloading it from here: http://ubuntuone.com/6MHk2xkW5L3Bl9pGsj10z4
Press Escape to exit the prototype.
Press Space to check out the prototype against a number of different desktop backgrounds (will cycle through the images in /usr/share/backgrounds)
Hold down Alt to show numbers on each display. Still holding down Alt, you can then tap a number to move the Greeter across to that numbered display, allowing you to change the display you log in with, without using the mouse. In the final implementation, the Super key will be used rather than the Alt key, but I can’t bind to that keyboard shortcut in my prototype.
Please let us know your thoughts on the updated specification and the new Greeter prototype.
Talk to us today
Interested in running Ubuntu in your organisation?
Newsletter signup
Related posts
How we ran an effective sprint to refresh our website, Part 1
Part 1 of how we ran a design sprint to refresh our website. Sharing what worked, what didn’t, and lessons from designing for open source in mind.
SONiC: The open source network operating system for modern data centers
Software for Open Networking in the Cloud (SONiC) is an open-source network operating system that has revolutionized data center networking. Originating as a...
Ubuntu developer images now available for OrangePi RV2: a low-cost RISC-V SBC
Canonical, the publisher of Ubuntu, is excited to announce the availability of Ubuntu developer images for the new OrangePi RV2 RISC-V single board computer...