Good stuff - the menu (M) button should be implemented by ages ..
finally some necessary order regarding usability
2011/3/21 frederik.nn...@gmail.com frederik.nn...@gmail.com:
hi fred ;)
On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 16:11, Fred n...@lognet.com.br wrote:
The Unit has been points of divergence
Good stuff - the menu (M) button should be implemented by ages ..
finally some necessary order regarding usability
No it should not, it's a bad idea and a degradation of usablity and if you
would have even the basic understanding of the subject of usability you would
know why.
Cheers,
I have the basic subject of Usability ;)
In fact I still earn money from this domain on a monthly basis.
About menu button - It's all about the user choice - Usability is
one of the Quality domains (btw) - for some applications, some users
never use menu entries and for some applications they
The new behavior for devices is an interesting idea to explore; not quite
sure about the rest.
Dynamic icons could be very confusing for some users...
2011/3/21 SorinN nemes.so...@gmail.com
I have the basic subject of Usability ;)
In fact I still earn money from this domain on a monthly
On 21/03/11 11:12, Mitja Pagon wrote:
Good stuff - the menu (M) button should be implemented by ages ..
finally some necessary order regarding usability
No it should not, it's a bad idea and a degradation of usablity and if
you would have even the basic understanding of the subject of
On 21/03/11 11:41, SorinN wrote:
Using Close-Minimize-Maximize buttons on the left side on the window
top is a breach for example (if you would have even the basic
understanding of the subject of usability you would know why...)
+1 :-)
Regards,
Lee.
--
It is characteristic of theistic
On 21/03/11 12:01, Mitja Pagon wrote:
First it's not all about choice, second if application has menus users
never use, should that application have menus at all? But that is not a
problem that should be solved on a shell level, it's up to
applications to improve their interfaces.
Surely it
On 03/21/2011 01:42 PM, Lee Hyde wrote:
As I mentioned previously, I favour these nested vertical menus (for me
they're much more intuitive*). Even if, as a fallback for applications
which still rely on a menu toolbar (presently the vast majority) it
involves a vertical implementation of said
On 21/03/11 13:27, Thorsten Wilms wrote:
But having to hit one target to reveal a 2nd level can't compete with
having that level directly accessible. (One might see Marking Menus as
an exception, where a little training allows blind use.)
I've found (and I can only speak for myself here of
IMHO:
keeping the old Gnome application categories and making them easy
accessible is a good idea.
Only using icons without text is a bad idea, that makes things very hard
to distinguish. Specially in the recent documents.
On 20.03.2011 16:11, Fred wrote:
The Unit has been points of
hi fred ;)
On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 16:11, Fred n...@lognet.com.br wrote:
The Unit has been points of divergence among the users. I developed some
ideas seeking to improve usability. I hope it will be useful for
developers.
Mockup in this video:
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