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.
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dragossh
Member since:
2008-12-16

- OS X window controls are basically o , o and o.

They are colored. After you hover over them, you know what each one does.

- iPod and iTunes have an o that means you have not started to listen a podcast marked with it. Not that it says so anywhere.

Logic says so. You wouldn't mark with an o a podcast that was already listened to, would you?

- The sort of slider with two positions for on and off I have seen on iPhone and OS X makes it pretty much impossible to to tell if it is on or off.

I think a lot of people can tell quite well. When it says Off it's off and when it says On (and it even turns blue) it's on. What's so hard to grasp?

- Dock. No matter who implements it, it sucks.

It's quite good in my opinion, maybe you're just accustomed to the taskbar. A Windows 7-like Dock would be neat though.

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