winstep wrote:
Actually, it's not.
There is a reason why even the original MacOSX dock placed running/minimized applications/documents on the right side.
There is one thing called muscle memory: your body gets used to things being on a particular place on the screen, or in a particular order. The list of running applications is dynamic, it grows and shrinks as you run and close programs. Shortcuts you actually add to the dock, however, do not, once you have your dock setup the way you like it, they tend to remain on fixed positions.
If the list of running applications was at the left of the dock, as you suggest, the position of the fixed shortcuts would be constantly jumping around.
Besides this very valid reason, there are other reasons related to performance that make placing running apps at the right of the dock a much better option.
Well, I don’t know how MacOS handles this, as I truly dislike anything Apple, but I find the user friendliness highly debatable. I 'suffer' from my own muscle memory, as I am used to find my running apps on the left side. I just know where to find them, but don’t do so on Nexus so far.
When it comes to readability, left-aligned text is always prefered in our cultural circle. We are reading left-to-right, and more important than an evenly spaced line is to be able to find anchors in the text in order to get to the next line. By having different locations where your line ends, you more easily find to the next line. However, the 'anchor' on the left side (all lines begin at the same location) coninscides with the direction of reading, so you e.g. put important things on the left side, where we begin our reading (that's why the logo is on the upper left side on most websites). For me, on the dock with my running apps, the running apps are the most important thing on the dock, and I expect to find them where my dock 'starts'. And I always easily found them before I used Nexus

. That is why I would love an option to put them to the left side of my dock.
winstep wrote:
You mean it plays for a while whatever is currently selected as the 'Attention' effect? […] now it only does it on schedule (i.e.; every 24 hours by default).
Exactly that, changed it to stop jumping (attention effect), thanks a bunch

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winstep wrote:
Yeah, seems a handful of apps have a problem with tray icon clicking. I will have to look at this - it is for sure related to the different versions of the API used for getting an icon on the tray.
Is there anything that can be done about it? EDIT: Alright, misread it, thank you for investigating :* .
winstep wrote:
froschfinger wrote:
3. The system tray doesn’t refresh immediately when an icon gets added to it, there is a delay of maybe 5-10 seconds.
I don't see that here. Are you saying that it still takes 5-10 seconds to update even with the real time refreshing option enabled?
Yes, I do. I can try it out with every program sending an icon to the tray, like MusicBee, Nylas N1, Steam and other apps. It is actually more like 20—30 seconds until icons appear. Immediate appearance is ticked, yes.
winstep wrote:
I know ObjectDock does this. For me it doesn't make much sense other than a 'window is minimized' indicator (and for obvious reasons stops working as such when windows are grouped together).
For me, as long as I don’t use grouped icons, which I don’t, it pretty much makes sense

. And yes, this being an indicator of a minimised window is exactly what I love about it, hehe

. You know, it seems not everything you or I, respectively, consider useful or useless is that way for everybody else. Still, I understand why you think it the better way, even though I prefer it differently

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