On 2013-05-02, at 3:07 PM, Oskar Krawczyk <oskar.krawc...@gmail.com> wrote
> 
> Just a quick introduction, my name's Oskar, I'm a UI/UX designer/developer.

Hello Oskar,

I'm not a dev, but I'm a passionate user (and briefly tester) of Adium, so I'll 
throw in my two cents.

> In February, I tweeted about how the messenger market for mac is lacking, 
> mentioning Adium in the process. Robert Vehse replied saying that if I have a 
> suggestion I should create something, so I teamed up with a great UI designer 
> and friend of mine (Dawid), and started working on a completely rethought 
> frontend for Adium.
> 
> The initial blog post about the Adium Case Study 
> http://nouincolor.com/blog/adium-reborn/ (click on the screen for a full 
> presentation - click to change the slide).

First of all, really nicely-designed website. Kudos.

Functional things that I really like:

1- Pinned messages: yes! so awesome. That would make scrolling up to see a 
reference message so much easier (well, unnecessary) (however see ** below)

2- Better menu-bar list: Active Study a la Fantastical would be really cool. I 
love using Fantastical's natural language parsing, and it could benefit Adium a 
lot, as long as it's not done while replacing the actions in menus or 
contextual menus.

3- Dropbox attachment zone: do I even need to say anything? That's just sexy.

> I've been using Adium for years (remember this or this), as much as I like 
> it, I'd love if this project could take a bolder move, and adopt a 
> minimalistic UI as we've created - this could potentially open the doors to a 
> completely new user-base.

** This is the part that I don't like so much. There has been a trend in Mac 
software design for less information density and much more spacing out, and I 
don't know how many other people feel the same way, but I strongly, strongly 
dislike it. I bought a refurbed 17" MBP because I want the real estate and want 
to have tons of information available without having to scroll or move things, 
and since Apple's taken that away, I already have to imagine going down to a 
15" in a number of years. I don't want to also have less information per 
square-inch.

Some of the things I love about current Adium

- I can have 10s of contacts and channels in my contact list and see them all 
without having to click on a menu or scroll a lot. If I understand the design 
correctly, the user will have to click on the menu to see their contacts, and 
then there's going to be a lot of scrolling.

- I can have many tabs on the bottom of the conversation window and see them 
all without having to scroll, until there is truly too many of them. This 
design is a lot like Messages, with way less contacts in the same area than 
current Adium.

- I can see tons of text in the conversation window without having to scroll 
(and I picked a Message Style and font that makes that happen). I don't know if 
Message Styles are considered for this design, but it seems to aim for/prefer a 
much more spaced-out message view. More like iMessage/texting than heavy IM-ing.

As for the user base, this has been discussed a couple of times on the 
#adium-devl IRC channel. I don't know that this will bring over a whole new 
demographic. I don't think Adium's user base is not bigger because people don't 
see a minimalist/modern-y design, it's because not that many people IM, and 
they text/iMessage/WhatsApp more. My guess — which could very well be wrong — 
is that people who want Adium for IM like having the customizability and high 
information density provided by current Adium. Those who don't just use GTalk 
in the browser.

I hope I didn't ramble too much. I know that is not the final design, and 
they're just screenshots, but those are my current thoughts on what I could 
see. Whatever happens, there is some functionality there that would be awesome 
for current Adium to get.

Cheers,

— Sherif

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