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Gmail's new look

Started by Darren Dirt, July 07, 2011, 11:26:06 AM

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Darren Dirt

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Mr. Analog

I'm hating the black bar bull@%&#, time to download Thunderbird again...
By Grabthar's Hammer

Melbosa

I hate to say it, but I like it.  Although I don't have the contrasting problem that I see a lot of people complaining about.
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Mr. Analog

Yeah, but you like "The Love Guru" so we know your taste is a bit off the beaten path compared to the rest of the herd LOL

The thing that bothers me the most about this black bar business is that from a design standpoint it counters the rest of Google's "be less obtrusive" design ethic, that bar is not what I want to see when I'm searching, using e-mail or doing anything else and yet they made it as unwelcome looking as humanly possible.
By Grabthar's Hammer

Darren Dirt

Quote from: Mr. Analog on July 07, 2011, 11:43:42 AM
from a design standpoint it counters the rest of Google's "be less obtrusive" design ethic, that bar is not what I want to see when I'm searching, using e-mail or doing anything else and yet they made it as unwelcome looking as humanly possible.

I've noticed a trend, probably mainly initiated by Microsoft (esp. Windows 7) or possibly due to the popularity of Facebook ... but images/icons/toolbars are being steadily replaced by TEXT. Text that you have to read, before you can decide if that's the button you're looking for.

Ugh.


Our brains are great at instant pattern-matching based on color, shape, and also location.

I'm really disappointed that even Google is following this reading-heavy trend. Any UI (including web interfaces for services like Gmail) that is not hyper-simple (i.e. has lots of functionality to choose from) should definitely take advantage of those universal things that made Windows 95 a success for the non-techie masses (compared to the text-heavy DOS/*nix offerings) ... it makes them a pleasure to use, instead of being exhausting (eyes moving aound all over the place to find That One Specific Button :sigh: ) and eventually something you find yourself avoiding.

/rant (i.e. do NOT want to re-open the Windows 7 pandora's box from a few weeks ago ;) )
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Mr. Analog

Actually the move to text is very much appreciated by me, they just don't have to make it ugly or stick out.
By Grabthar's Hammer

Thorin

Umm, they already had text links as buttons.  The old style had blue link text on a white background with the background highlighting grayish when you moused over it.  The new style has off-white text on a black background highlighting dark grayish when you mouse over it.

This change was just a CSS change, as far as I can tell.  It's even the exact same size, at 32 pixels high.  And I agree with Mr.A., it's harder to read because of the lack of contrast compared to the old bar.
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Darren Dirt

Okay sorry I wasn't clear.

Something I've noticed is a move towards buttons/links that are ONLY identifiable (and distinguishable from each other) by the letters. NOT by pictures/icons, not by COLORS, and often not even by location.

Hence my comment above -- obviously text is needed and not necessarily a bad thing if it's text-only. Just have some useful intelligence in the placement and/or informational coloring and you've got a UI Win Win.

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Strive for progress. Not perfection.
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Mr. Analog

Okay, we're on the same page then.
By Grabthar's Hammer

Tom

I don't hate the new look, but the contrast could definitely be better. One thing to note, is Google's design head for google+ (including the gmail updates) is the guy that's responsible for a /lot/ of iOS and OSX's design aesthetic. He and the head of google+ are also working more like dictators, basically decreeing how things will be, which is not how google has worked in the past. So things are basically different, because things are different. There's actually some kind of over-arching long term goal here that we won't see for probably years. In the mean time, we get updates peace-meal, some of which no doubt, a large portion of people won't be happy with.
<Zapata Prime> I smell Stanley... And he smells good!!!

Darren Dirt

_____________________

Strive for progress. Not perfection.
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Darren Dirt

#11
Quote from:  http://twitter.com/BorowitzReport/status/88054546730979329
@BorowitzReport
Andy Borowitz
I'm looking forward to what Google does with its logo on the day of the Apocalypse.

Andy Borowitz, short-form comic genius on par with Steve, and maybe even Conan ("@BorowitzReport: Consistently the funniest man on twitter." sez George Carlin's daughter ; I concur!)
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Strive for progress. Not perfection.
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Darren Dirt

Google Plus (or is it "Google+" ?? ) explained by Vancouver Sun ("so easy a grandparent can do it"?)
http://www.vancouversun.com/Circles+Hangouts+Sparks+simple+guide+getting+started+Google+Plus/5096798/story.html


the VS g+ page is pretty clean: http://gplus.to/thevancouversun
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Thorin

I'm really "meh" about Google+.  Dunno why, I used to get excited at new Google offerings.
Prayin' for a 20!

gcc thorin.c -pedantic -o Thorin
compile successful

Mr. Analog

You know what the "hey I'm excited about this" moment was for me? When I realized that I WASN'T sucked in to spending 2 hours+ farting around on Google+. I get in, see what peeps are up to, manage some circles and I'm done.

That was the light bulb moment, it's almost like when I realized that I could keep tabs with a group of people at the same time by joining a listserv
By Grabthar's Hammer