IDG News Service - Canonical will equip the next release of its Ubuntu
Linux OS with a new type of interface that allows desktop users to execute
functions for any program through a command line interface or by voice command.
The new interface, called the Head-Up Display (HUD), "will
ultimately replace menus in Unity applications," said Canonical founder
Mark Shuttleworth,in a blog post announcing the technology. The first
version of HUD will be part of the Ubuntu 12.04 Long Term release (LTS), due in
April.
Unity is the Ubuntu's standard shell, or desktop interface. HUD
provides an overlay that sits on top of the desktop. When the translucent HUD
console is evoked, the user can type in any number of keywords to find a
specific function, bookmark or file. The command line, in effect, acts as a
search engine for individual application resources. Using autocomplete, it will
speed access time in subsequent uses. Any program that is written to work with
the Unity global menu will work with HUD.
HUD came about as a way to address shortcomings of traditional
application menus. They can slow down power users in a number of ways,
Shuttleworth said. They also require a lot of reading to find one function and
they force users to remember arbitrary hotkeys for specific functions. And they
can categorize functions into ambiguously defined and confusing top-level
menus.
HUD offers a number of advantages over standard menus, Shuttleworth
said. It can do fuzzy matching to help users find commands when they don't know
the exact words to evoke. A few words that describe the command may be enough
to locate that function. HUD will also keep track of the most frequently used
commands and offer those more readily.
Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, it will be outfitted to
work with voice input. "We want to make it easy to talk to any
application, and for any application to respond to your voice. The full
integration of voice into applications will take some time. We can start by
mapping voice onto the existing menu structures of your apps. And it will only
get better from there," Shuttleworth wrote.
HUD even works with the Unix native command line, allowing HUD
actions to be scripted and included in pipes, the technique of connecting the
output from one Unix utility to the input of another.
HUD is not an entirely new idea. Giving the user a command line
interface to quickly call up specific functions has already been implemented in
a number of applications. Unix text editors such as Vim and Emacs have long
featured the technology. Mozilla offers a command-line console, called Ubiquity, for
the Firefox browser. Apple's OS X has a similar feature where users can
autocomplete a command from within a program itself. HUD, however, is
advantageous in that it can offer the same basic interface for all the
applications on a desktop, minimizing the learning curve for individual
applications.
Shuttleworth contrasted HUD with Microsoft's Ribbon interface,
first introduced in Microsoft Office, which also tackles the problem of making
unwieldy menus easier to navigate for users. While the ribbon made commands
easier to spot, it also takes up a lot of space on the screen, which can be a
distraction. In contrast, HUD shows "users just what they want, when they
want it," Shuttleworth said.
Joab Jackson covers enterprise software and general technology
breaking news for The
IDG News Service.
Follow Joab on Twitter at @Joab_Jackson. Joab's e-mail address is Joab_Jackson@idg.com
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