Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 7th Nov 2007 10:12 UTC, submitted by wakeupneo
Graphics, User Interfaces Adobe Systems wants to transform its flagship Photoshop software with an interface customized to the task at hand, a potentially radical revamp for software whose power today is hidden behind hundreds of menu options. A new user interface will help Photoshop become "everything you need, nothing you don't," said Photoshop product manager John Nack, describing aspirations for the Photoshop overhaul on his blog Monday. "We must make Photoshop dramatically more configurable," Nack said. "Presenting the same user experience to a photographer as we do to a radiologist, as to a Web designer, as to a prepress guy, is kind of absurd... With the power of customizability, we can present solutions via task-oriented workspaces," Nack said.
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Classic Mode
by PLan on Wed 7th Nov 2007 10:39 UTC
PLan
Member since:
2006-01-10

My guess is that after Adobe have finished messing about with the Photoshop interface the first thing most users will do is to look for the menu option that allows them to switch back to "Classic" mode.

RE: Classic Mode
by sard on Wed 7th Nov 2007 10:50 in reply to "Classic Mode"
sard Member since:
2005-11-16

A la Office 2007.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2

RE[2]: Classic Mode
by google_ninja on Wed 7th Nov 2007 14:23 in reply to "RE: Classic Mode"
google_ninja Member since:
2006-02-05

I find the only people that bitch about the Ribbon UI are those that haven't used it. I really wish MS would extend it to Visual Studio.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 5

RE: Classic Mode
by buff on Wed 7th Nov 2007 11:00 in reply to "Classic Mode"
buff Member since:
2005-11-12

I love the classic mode idea. Let's hope they keep that option around but I doubt it will exist. This seems to be the new trend for flagship software: revamp the UI when you can't figure out what new features to add to sell a new version. The other day I was watching someone give a powerpoint presentation and they were hunting for the fullscreen slideshow button on the ribbon. It appeared more awkward for the person to use. I wonder how much usability studies truly factor into these decisions. Is it really that much easier to use?

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 5

RE[2]: Classic Mode
by CPUGuy on Wed 7th Nov 2007 15:42 in reply to "RE: Classic Mode"
CPUGuy Member since:
2005-07-06

The idea is that the ribbon changes to meet the task that you are currently doing. So if you making a table, then the options for tables are prominent.
This is instead of just having your favorite/most used functions cluttering up the bar, which can get cluttered very quickly.

A usability study doesn't really make sense until someone actually gets comfortable with the new UI.

A couple of studies that can be done is seeing how quickly someone can pick up the old-style UI compared to picking up the new style UI.
Or how quickly someone can work being comfortable with both UIs.

People just simply have to learn/train on the new way to use the given application.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1