Shit, while it took some getting used to, I have to admit I love the
interface in WMP 10.  I mean I leave as a tool bar 95% of the time, you can
change play lists, volume, fast forward, rewind, and do all the basic shit
right there.  When I rip new CDs is about the only time I even see a full
sized interface.

I'll have to check out the prezo.  I'm working for a new interface for a
very large very complex questionnaire style application right now, and it's
existing interface is crap, all form controls and links.

BTW what was that free icon thing that went around not to long ago?  I meant
to save it but didn't, and now I can't find it.

--
Timothy Heald
Analyst, Architect, Developer
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
W: 202-228-8372
C: 703-300-3911
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Davis [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2006 10:12 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: RE: New Office UI Presentation

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Kevin Graeme [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2006 8:47 AM
> To: CF-Community
> Subject: Re: New Office UI Presentation
> 
> I absolutely HATE the UI in WMP10 hiding the File, Edit, etc menus and 
> it looks like they've decided hiding menus is the next big thing for 
> Office too. Fuckers.

Well - I hate that too (which is I why I turned off the "feature") but I
wouldn't lump the two in together.

In WMP is idea was a misguided attempt to "clean" the interface.  It didn't
- it made it harder since they were hiding things you needed all the time -
they hide (by default) some of the most commonly used controls!

To be fair they DO expose many of them in other ways by those ways are
rarely clear.  (This is why I liked the comments made in the video about how
difficult it is to work with a large iconography: when soooo many features
are identified with tiny icons it's impossible to remember.)

That's a good example of a bad contextual UI: the context of your use wasn't
honored, just an arbitrary context invented by the application.

In Office the hiding (so far at least) seems nicely contextual.  Things are
hidden not to "clean things up" but because you can't use them any more
(you're not touching a picture so you can't use the image tool for example).

I think it's an important difference - one that potentially makes the
feature insanely useful instead of insanely frustrating.

It may be a cluster-f*ck (I'm going by the same information as you and they
still can screw it up) but so far I really like it.  At the very least it
does show a concerted effort to evolve the UI in the right way (according to
actual usability principles instead of visual effects).  This might be a
failure, but we'll learn a lot from the attempt.

Jim Davis




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