▲ | Pet_Ant 6 days ago | |||||||||||||
I miss the Windows 98 days where almost all apps used the same generic UI and the visuals drifted into the background like noise and I just saw buttons and checkboxes. That’s the worst part of webapps is that they have their own look’n’feel. I don’t want your branding and colours. I want the functionality and get out of my way. I want my own colours and fonts. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | whizzter 6 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
While I agree to some extent about branding and colours, things were hardly a panacea with a lot of buttons and checkboxes as the infamous "Bulk Rename Utility" showed how things could get out of control (probably nice for the author and those that used it from the start but waay too cluttered for anyone without exp). First and foremost an UI shouldn't confuse or even worse mislead the user, now button as hammer for everything chaoses of old or branding idiocy of today both are guilty of those crimes. The art of UI's has progressed, sadly some fresh designers are dogmatic as they are mostly exposed to "beautiful" B2C products rather that internal products and often miss the effectiveness factor of tools. https://medium.com/@aneel.kaushikk/bulk-rename-utility-redes... | ||||||||||||||
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▲ | graemep 6 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
Or MacOS from the same period which was even better, or desktop software in general. Even now desktops are a lot more consistent. People often complain about lack of consistency between Linux desktop apps (e.g. Gtk vs Qt), but the differences are usually compared to the differences between web apps. |