Hello
Because a dev has locked the comments under relevant bug report (
https://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=68177) I'm going to attempt to take the discussion here. While understanding that developers are busy people and don't have all day to argue with users, I would hope that he (as well as others) won't turn back on the issue that caused relatively significant number of people - as far as bug reporting goes - to state their problem. So, to start from answering the points from the last comment.
> The bug tracker is a work planner for developers, not a debate forum. Arguing with a decision here rarely makes us more likely to reverse course.
I was about to place here a rant about how nothing can ever get ivory tower developers to reverse course and how the only rationale given is "we know better"... But okay, regardless of how I feel about the attitude here, I understand that this request would need a work put into it that can be put elsewhere. I hope this list will be deemed a better place for attempting to prove the issue's importancy.
> Also, considering Google doesn't log the search engines you have stored locally, I don't see what rationale would explain the conspiracy theory in comment 17.
That was merely a guess stated on my part, based on the fact that the issue clearly affecting a number of users has been shunned so quickly and without any consideration given.
> we don't provide (for example) an options-menu checkbox to disable disk caching or a table where you can list different user agents you want to send to particular sites or a toggle
> between Firefox-style and IE-style GIF animation timings.
I don't know if it's intentional reductio ad absurdum, or if you really think these issues are of the same level. Nontheless, this comparison is faulty. Disk caching and GIF animation timings don't cause a bloat in user interface, auto-adding search engines that user knows from the start he/she doesn't want them does. That's pretty much the point here: the design rationale given is incosistent. The proposition of adding an option is rejected on the basis that options cause bloat. If a multitude of search engines that need to be manually removed are not bloat then I don't know what is. If anything, trading all this bloated space for one switch - even if we agree it's a bloat, too - seems like a huge step forward in actually reducing the UI bloat.
> In general, the route we prefer to go for niche cases is to try and support them via extensions.
I'm curious, what makes you qualify this case as "niche"? There are certainly many more popular ones, but a quick check - didn't find tools in adv. search to make an accurate statistics, sorry - tells me that issues on Chromium bugtracker rarely get starred more than 10 times, almost 20.
> We would probably not be opposed to an extension API to control the search engine database if there were clear and compelling use cases
> for it ("delete all my engines" alone would not be enough).
Okay - so you won't provide an option requested, and the reason for the option isn't compelling enough to enable people to code it themselves. Am I reading this correctly?
Regards,
Hubert