Applications must not steal focus EVER.
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ubuntu |
Confirmed
|
Undecided
|
Unassigned |
Bug Description
I've actually just added this exact progress on #54127 but I am so bloody angry with this crappy behaviour that I'm starting another bug...
Ubuntu now has a very serious usability issue as there are far too many applications that have started stealing focus.
This is something that should be absolutely forbidden and it should be a condition of getting an application into the Ubuntu repositories that it does steal focus. In fact this should be enforced in the GUI toolkits and it should not be possible for a developer to make an app steal focus without jumping through hoops.
When I am using a program I expect to use that program uninterrupted until *I* have decided to do something else.
For instance: I have just installed the "GNU ConvertAudioFile" script so I can convert 200 small WAV soundbytes I have created into mp3 format. Not only does this script popup a progress dialogue (with a single "Cancel" button ) and steal focus it will also pop the bloody thing up on whichever workspace I switch to. There is no escaping being interrupted.
Needless to say this meant that a good percentage of conversion operations were inadvertently cancelled whilst I was trying to type a previous bug report (the spacebar being accepted as a click on the cancel button) In fact I eventually had to kill X with "Ctrl+Alt+
Sorry but it totally UNACCEPTABLE for this bloody awful UI design to continue. This problem has been getting steadily worse for a while now as all sorts of programs (including such things as Update Manager) have started doing it too.
Please fix this behaviour as a matter of utmost priority as it really is totally ruining the Ubuntu desktop experience.
If I wanted this crappy behaviour I'd be sticking to Windows.
Thanks for your submission. I'm speechless.
Yes, Ubuntu is looking more like Windows. Wait until you see pop-up ads. Perhaps you can use sox. It's a command line audio tool. No pop-ups that I am aware of.
>sudo apt-get install sox
Marking as Confirmed to preserve use case.