Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 1st Jul 2007 15:21 UTC
Editorial Sometimes, Apple's (or any other software maker's) complete lack of respect for usability never ceases to amaze me. Take today for example. Apart from the close, minimise, and "maximise" widgets Apple places on window decors, there is also a fourth widget programmers on the Apple platform can use. This widget resembles a sort of dash, and is placed on the top right corner of the window decor. This widget is used in many applications, both from Apple as well as from various third parties. It has one function: toggle the visibility of the window's toolbar.
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emission
Member since:
2005-07-21

There are consistency rules, but programmers may not always follow them. It's the same thing with all window manager environments, even Mac OS X and Windows.


But that's actually the real problem. For MacOS 9 Apple had a well written set of UI guidelines, which were easy to follow and comprehend. Now everything is a mess, and although guidelines exist, they aren't nearly as well thought out as the MacOS 9 version and not even Apple follows them.

OS9 looks old now, but it's consistent, tactile (draggable items look draggable) and the metaphors work.

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