Restructuring the menus isn't the massive drastic change many people have talked about. I'm fine with restructuring the menus, and encourage it. However, all the Renaissance mock-ups/prototypes I've seen seem to mimic the Ribbon UI.
As someone who uses both MS Office and OOo on a daily basis, I find the OOo FAR MORE USABLE for an advanced user. Every day there are tasks I want to accomplish in MS Office, but I can't find the appropriate option in the Ribbon interface. It drives me nuts. The menus may be poorly organized now, but my point is that we shouldn't abandon the model of toolbars and menus to chase something new like Ribbon. It isn't simply a matter of a brief learning curve. 3 years after the Ribbon first came out, I still loathe it. I know I'm not the only one. And while I haven't seen a clear indication that the Renaissance has committed completely to a specific direction, every presentation I've seen suggests you are moving to a Ribbon clone. I want absolutely nothing to do with that, nor do I feel it is in any way better for usability to hide 95% of your functionality. While I understand the claims of signal to noise, eventually you need something other than the basic icons on the Ribbon and you simply can't find those options. The trade-off is terrible. -- T. J. On Tue, Nov 2, 2010 at 4:18 PM, Christoph Noack < [email protected]> wrote: > Hi T.J.! > > Am Dienstag, den 02.11.2010, 13:05 -0500 schrieb T. J. Brumfield: > > > > I truly believe the current approach works and should be maintained, > > but > > improved. There might be some slight tweaks in how the menus are > > organized. > > Toolbar defaults might be optimized. And the overall UI could be > > shined up > > with some gloss, new icons, gradients, spot color, etc. > > Many people asked itself whether some tweaks might make the current UI > more usable in the long-run. To make a long story short: no. > > To address some of your points: > * Visual Design: New icons / gradients / gloss doesn't improve the > interaction quality, people rely on. We might only get a short > positive effect, but no improvement. People will notice that :-) > > * Cleaning: When designing functionality for the UI, one will > notice that the menus itself are the problem. We have far too > many small "atomic" features combined with "workflow related" > topics. Here, our UI doesn't scale (The "where to put" problem > comes up quite regularly). Thus, in the meantime (e.g. the > Renaissance Team) improves selected workflows that will finally > lead to a better menu structure (because you won't need some of > the options any more). But after all, too many features and the > (for this kind of application) "wrong" interaction concept. > > * Defaults: There is work done on that - the Renaissance team > works on "Better Defaults" already and RGB ES did also propose > to work on better defaults (as he also mentioned). This is a > very good start - defaults and templates are two dark > chapters ;-) > > * Step-by-step improvements: I hope that we'll be able to improve > many things - besides the menus. For example, Mirek put in some > nice ideas ... > > > Cheers, > Christoph > > > -- > Unsubscribe instructions: Email to > [email protected]<discuss%[email protected]> > Posting guidelines: http://netmeister.org/news/learn2quote.html > Archive: http://www.documentfoundation.org/lists/discuss/ > *** All posts to this list are publicly archived *** > > -- Unsubscribe instructions: Email to [email protected] Posting guidelines: http://netmeister.org/news/learn2quote.html Archive: http://www.documentfoundation.org/lists/discuss/ *** All posts to this list are publicly archived ***
