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Ask Slashdot: Is the Recycle Bin a Good GUI Metaphor?

dsginter writes "During a recent Windows 7 upgrade, I disabled the 'Recycle Bin' from appearing on the user desktop. Why? Because this allows the users to retrieve errant deletions. While this was the goal of the 'Recycle Bin' in the first place, most people (including myself) are in the good habit of keeping a tidy workspace and 'taking out the trash' when they see that it is full. For some people, their OCD meant that deleting a file was a two step process: delete the file and then empty the recycle bin. By disabling it from view, I have found that the original function is restored for the smattering of times that it is actually needed. Why are we wasting pixels on such a poor metaphor?" Going further, is there some combination of metaphor and method of use that you'd find more useful or natural?

6 of 465 comments (clear)

  1. Shift+Delete by NemosomeN · · Score: 5, Funny

    Stop being a pussy.

    --
    I hate grammar Nazi's.
  2. OMG GOOD JOB!!! by gavron · · Score: 4, Funny
    Yes, you got a stupid one past the editors at slashdot.

    Let the resume' building commence.

    You so smart.

    No, really.

    Here's a pixel for your effort: .

  3. Steve Jobs Mansion by Essequemodeia · · Score: 1, Funny

    Rename the Recycle Bin "Steve Jobs Mansion" and a committee will prevent you from emptying it for 10 years.

  4. I was a big OS/2 fan because it had a shredder by brokeninside · · Score: 5, Funny

    I thought that was THE metaphor for deleting files, dragging them to the shredder.

    Plus, my wife edited a .wav of a chainsaw buzzing followed by a scream and associated it with the action of shredding a file. That added to the effect, you shred a file, hear it get cut up and scream its last. The message it re-inforced was FILE DONE GONE!

  5. Multiple trashcans FTW! by Twinbee · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've only just skimmed the summary, but I completely agree, it'd be wonderful to have multiple recycle bins, each a different colour so I can organize my trash. I put red files/icons in the red trash, and green ones in the green etc. I'm pretty sure this helps the OS with housekeeping, because it makes it easier to restore the bits for future files. Sometimes, the colour is not seen before, so I've set up a system to pick the trashcan colour from a colour wheel - this helps organization further.

    On top of this scheme, I have various levels of trash: shallow, deep, and megadeep. When I first delete a file, it goes into the shallow trash so that I can restore the file immediately if I've made a mistake. If I'm really sure I don't want a file, or I need more disk space, every so often, I dig into the shallow trash, and move them into the deeper trashcan, and again with the other levels, finally to be deleted at the end of the chain. It's cumbersome, but this way I can make sure I won't delete very important files too easily.

    --
    Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
  6. Re:Shit+Delete by mysidia · · Score: 2, Funny

    Shit+Delete Stop being a pussy.

    There, fixed it for you.