* Allow for multiple notes. A tabbed interface would be really useful, since there are no titles for notes. Not all objects would necessarily need multiple notes. Determine which ones should and shouldn't. * Drag and drop should display the icon we are dragging instead of just the default icon. Nautilus does this very effectively, and GTK has support for this. * Provide an "import" of a gramps package. Not too difficult to do this, since there is already a ReadTarFile class which will unpackage the file. Needs have an interface built around it. * Catch uncaught exceptions at the top level, notifiy the user, and store the results in a file that can be emailed. Have the start of this with the gramps.err file, but most users don't realize that this file has been created. Some type of notification is needed. * Allow an image to be dropped onto the image box on the first tab of the EditPerson dialog. This would make that image the first in the photo list as well. * Speed up the reading of the database. The python XML routines are not as fast as I would like, and it can take a minute or so to read a large database. This is way too slow. * GEDCOM import should use the GEDCOM ID values as the GRAMPS ids if the current database is empty. This would help us in the future if we want to do an incremental update. Having the GEDCOM ID and the gramps ID match up would be a good indication that these are the same people. For example, @F001@ would become F001. * Finish the generic load of revision control interfaces to allow a revision control plugin system. Most of the work is already done. * Extend the gramps package exporting to export to a ISO-9660 CD-ROM image. Thumbnails would need to be exported for this as well, since the CD-ROM would be read-only after burning. * Disable the save buttons if gramps database is marked read-only. Disable the adding of media objects as well, since this will cause gramps to try to create a thumbnail in a readonly database. * OpenOffice zip file is not handled very gracefully. Uses the "system" call to generate the zip file using the hard coded path of /usr/bin/zip. Python 2.0 provides a zip interface, so this may need to hold off until the move is made to Python 2.0. * Sort all lists * And a whole lot more....