Re: First UI component needing replacement.
- From: "Michael T. Babcock" <mbabcock fibrespeed net>
- To: "Chris LeDantec" <Chris LeDantec netbeans com>,<gnome-gui-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: First UI component needing replacement.
- Date: Tue, 15 Aug 2000 12:20:03 -0400
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris LeDantec" <Chris.LeDantec@netbeans.com>
> the point is, the checkbox and the selection highlight is redundant. good
ui
> design does everything to eliminate redundancy when it is un-needed.
I potentially agree -- but I don't see them as 'two' indicators necessarily,
but as a combined indicator.
> why is it that you've got such a distaste for combining keyboard and
mouse?
I think you could do a poll and find a lot of people would be against
forcing users to combine keyboard and mouse to do simple and frequent tasks.
> there is a lot of complex behavior that cannot be combined with only two
> (three) buttons.
That's true. But this is simple behaviour. Selecting multiple files should
be _easy_, not complex.
> unless there is something that
> really substantiates the benefit of a design change, all you end up doing
is
> creating quirks that are fun for branding but hard on the user. users
moving
> to linux/gnome are going to have an easier time of it if there is
> consistency in the fundamental tasks.
For some reason emacs and vi have managed to continue to be very popular
despite their non-efforts to be the same as Windows in interface. I
disagree with your assumptions.
> likewise, a user brought up on
> linux/gnome will not be so severed from the rest of the world if the core
> behaviors are similar.
Not necessarily -- this is based on assumptions that aren't proven.
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