psudotechzealot
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- Jul 6, 2013
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- the user must be able to swipe from the left edge to reveal the menu contents, this is so they can still use it while holding the phone one-handed
This still isn't one hand usability friendly. As, even if you swipe from the left side to reveal the menu, you will still have to tap on the upper left side of the screen to use those menus, as oppposed to the current UI where even the ellipsis and the controls are at the bottom.
Who in the world invented the hamburger menu anyway? That's what I'd like to know...
Who in the world invented the hamburger menu anyway? That's what I'd like to know...
This still isn't one hand usability friendly. As, even if you swipe from the left side to reveal the menu, you will still have to tap on the upper left side of the screen to use those menus, as oppposed to the current UI where even the ellipsis and the controls are at the bottom.
It would also help if the menu had wraparound scrolling. So after revealing the menu with the swipe, an upward swipe anywhere on the menu brings the options from to top to the lower part of the menu so you can easily select it.
Hamburger menus are all over Android and Android is the most popular mobile OS, so I this makes no sense. It's definitely not hurting Android.
Nah.. Instead get rid of hamburgers in the PC version and put pivots there. Isn't it better?![]()
If you truly believe that a lot of people seriously considered WP, and then thought or had a feeling along the lines of: "you know what, if only this command bar was at the top I would buy it", then I have a bridge I'd like to sell you. Sorry tiziano, that's nonsense.The weirdness of Metro is one of the causes to explain the low market share of this platform.
You guys will be complaining forever, I hope you know that. I don't care how it looks just give me the features I need and want. [bleep] Metro, [bleep] panorama. All you guys do is hold on to the past. One tech writer even argued that we should bring back built in Hubs for goodness sake. Completely forgetting the huge problems they brought. It seems like being different has created more headache for Microsoft than its worth, they can't move forward. People want their cake and they want to eat it too. And the Nokia hardcore fans that say they wont buy a windows phone with the words "Microsoft" on it in lieu of "Nokia". Give me a brake numbnuts its the same thing, same people making the phone. It seems it to me it would be better that all these people who don't like where Microsoft is going should jump ship put all of us out of our misery. You don't complain about what MS is doing we don't have to listen to your constant whining, geeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeezzz.
If you truly believe that a lot of people seriously considered WP, and then thought or had a feeling along the lines of: "you know what, if only this command bar was at the top I would buy it", then I have a bridge I'd like to sell you. Sorry tiziano, that's nonsense.
At this point WP's low market share does have something to do with convention... the convention is that iOS or Android are so prevalent, that WP isn't even thought of as a valid choice. There are a dozen other reasons too, but the command bar being at the bottom is not one of them.
People is not operating in a deep rational level all the time. So, of course It's not like you said.
The rejection to WP is an emotional reaction to the question: "How do I use this fu*** thing?". It's not a deep analysis about the relative position of the UI elements.
A device that has the UI elements where they're supposed to be, generates confidence in the prospective buyer.
Well said. If WP lost modern design, it loose almost all that it have.So, if we wanted FEATURES we would be on Android. We want a system that is more elegant, fluid and retains what made it original in the first place.
Neither is better. Both have their place. For example, if your content is an almost full screen and swipeable map, then you can't or at least shouldn't use the same gesture (swiping) for navigation.
We need both options. This is not an either/or question. The real questions are:
A) when should which approach be used
B) what would a Metro-Like implementation for both approaches look&feel like
C) and which should be the preferred approach if both are viable.
Many of us refer to this as the hamburger-problem, and some brain-deads unfortunately mistake that to mean that some just don't like how the icon looks, which is completely besides the point.
What it really comes down to is how to best implement navigation that is compact so it doesn't require a lot of screen real estate/chrome, can be used with one hand, doesn't distract from the content, looks clean and uncluttered, and is intuitive. It's not really about a particular button, and particularly not about a hamburger button.