Categories
Design Interface

Browser Design Critic

All users are subjected to the interface designer’s choices in a very real way. If there is something that flies in the face of convention, users tend to live with it, blame themselves, or if you use a Mac, subject your blog audience to nitpicking rants.

I love experimenting with new software and seeing how developers/designers choose to implement the user side of a given feature. Apple’s well designed button layout in Safari, with the integrated progress bar-on-address-bar is pretty slick:

Furthermore, they combined the stop/reload buttons due to their boolean, opposing nature.

This particular design, incidentally, was shamelessly ripped off by Firefox, although the combined Stop/Reload button is available as a 3rd party extension.

Seeing the UI travesty that is the IE7 beta, however, yet again implies that Microsoft employees don’t actually use the software they write. Needless paradigm changes and missing features adorn their new browser. Of course, this is a beta, but for something Microsoft knew would be scrutinized with a fine toothed comb, they sure like subjecting testers to very poor usablility.

EDIT: I forgot to discuss the needless paradigm changes: if you click the rightmost tabling, it will create a new tab. Whoever thought that was a good idea…sigh. Adobe does something cool: if you double click the background of their MDI interface it brings up an open dialog. Why not make [double]clicking on whitespace create a new tab ala Firefox?

Categories
Visit This Site

My, that’s liberating

Nothing like a bunch of slightly pretentious graffiti artists to brighten up your day. But its OK, props for being interesting.

Categories
Design Technical Web Design

And just like that, everyone wins

The year is 2005. The web has become commonplace, and people are ready for more dynamic content in their browsing experience. The ensuing battle of AJAX and Flash is fought tooth and nail. Macromedia Macrodobe claims 98% penetration of the Flash client on web-enabled computers, and even if that sounds decidedly optimistic AJAX likely has a level near that. The competition only becomes greater and greater for Web 2.0 apps, and everyone has the potential to benefit.

So. Check out this cool Flash revamped version of popular Earth mapping software du jour (currently Google Maps and MSN Earth). Decide for yourself who’s going to win the upcoming battle. I’d normally say Flash, but it’s had more than a few years headstart and hasn’t receieved nearly the attention from “serious” coders that AJAX has displayed of late. Possibly it’s only hype, or maybe it’s because there exists no Linux version of the Flash builder…or, possibly, ActionScript sucks a little too much. I still wistfully remember wasting 3 hours in a row debugging array code because the ActionScript interpreter wouldn’t display an error message. It stumped 3 labbies.

Categories
Facts Of Life

No, it’s C, A, T. Just read some books already!

[Captain Obvious]
There aren’t too many things more immediately and absolutely damning to one’s credibility than misspellings in their otherwise perfect text. When my seniors hypothetically ask me how to spell remedial words, I hypothetically feel pretty embarrassed for them.

Nitpicky? Sure, they’d certainly say so. But while it might be demanding for such folk, perfect spelling and grammar are esoteric goals all communicators (which means nearly everyone) need to strive for.
[/Captain Obvious]

Categories
General

Files, anyone?

These guys are part owned by Google, which is perhaps unsurprising judging by the liberal interface borrowing. My browser equated Chinese characters to unicode squares/question marks, so one link stood out in particular: “MP3.” And yes, every name I tried had more than a few results hidden away in someone’s web server.

The RIAA can’t even begin to touch overseas servers…and apart from scare tactic lawsuits in the US nothing seems to be working for them.