On Thu, 23 Apr 2009 14:32:13 -0400, Georg Wrede <[email protected]> wrote:

Steven Schveighoffer wrote:
On Thu, 23 Apr 2009 12:09:20 -0400, Georg Wrede <[email protected]> wrote:

(OT: an excellent example of this It's Done Because We Noticed We Could stuff is in Firefox. When a picture is a link to another page, and you want to drag that to the tab area, the entire picture is dragged with the mouse. Now, how the hell am I supposed to hit the small tab area when the large picture covers half of my Firefox??

So now I have to learn to remember to grab bigger pictures near some edge. And I really can't see *any* valid benefit for having to drag the picture. I'd rather have it the old way, where the mouse pointer simply changes shape, so you know you're dragging. Damn, damn...)
On my system, dragging the image drags a translucent copy of the image, so I can still see where my mouse pointer is aimed. Maybe you don't have enough colors enabled on your screen?

Sure it looks good, and the computer owner can brag to the guy in the next cubicle, etc. But there should be some obvious or useful *purpose* for dragging entire pictures where a mouse pointer would be clearer, cleaner, easier for the user, and use less computer cycles.

I mean, who's such a nutcase that he forgets halfway in the dragging, what it is he's dragging?

One thing that does annoy me is if you are doing this over a slow RDP link, the eye candy isn't worth it.

I was never a huge fan of application themes. I don't mind a theme for the whole system (as long as it's simple), but I don't want iTunes to look different just because it can. I think it has been discussed before that most video editors have the slickest GUI, with real-looking knobs and "led's", but the video editing part of it is buggy as hell.

-Steve

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