Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 28th Feb 2009 11:47 UTC
Apple A few days ago, Apple surprised everyone by releasing the first beta of Safari 4, the company's latest version of their WebKit browser. While I generally love Safari on the Mac (my browser of choice on that side of the fence), I've never felt as comfortable with it on the Windows side of things. In any case, this latest beta has made a very bold move in the interface department, and I'm sad to say that it's not for the better. Let me explain where it went wrong for Apple.
Permalink for comment 351087
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE: What?
by Thom_Holwerda on Sat 28th Feb 2009 15:34 UTC in reply to "What?"
Thom_Holwerda
Member since:
2005-06-29

Can you, for once, make a point in plain English, as well as without any insults or nasty words? I cannot possibly take you serious this way. I'm sorry.

I did find that link of yours interesting. I don't think you read it very well, because the author actually agreed with me about the tabs. Edit: In fact, BOTH of your links agree with my position, and bring forward similar arguments! Did you really read those links, or what?!?

But this is all trivial compared to the dramatic changes to tabs. Having tabs at the top is a very logical thing to do; tabs do take precedence over other controls, and are relevant at the top; but two things are possibly confusing; having no title bar to drag the window around with, which you are used to, and the ‘travel time’ of bringing your cursor to the top of the window to switch tabs is greater. I found it uncomfortable at first; I’d like to know what you think. I think it’ll grow on me, though.


What's interesting is that that link of yours focusses on the new functionality in Safari 4, not the UI per se. And yes, I do consider myself knowledgable on this subject. I've spent a hell of a lot of time reading, studying, and writing about UI design.

No, I'm not claiming that I'm "right", or that my opinion is all that matters. That's why this is an editorial - as in, a personal opinion. I suggest that for your next comment, you try to come up with counterarguments, in understandable English, without insults or nasty words.

Then we'll see if you actually have anything to contribute. Because right now, you're just flying insults around.

Edited 2009-02-28 15:37 UTC

Reply Parent Score: 4