- Nov 17, 2013
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Let me start by saying that I've owned Windows Phones for years as well as developed apps leisurely. I love Microsoft and WP, as well as many of the directions 10 is taking...with the glaring exception of UI. So, here are my two cents:
App Bar, Panorama, and Pivot. These amazing and unique Windows Phone continuities are now at risk for the future of the OS. This is evident, specifically in all of the new applications for Windows 10 for Phones (10051).
Let's start with App Bar. There have always been three dots which can be either tapped or swiped up in order to see more settings and other contextual 'buttons.' A subtle change they have made is making the three dots a physical button that can only be tapped and not swiped (which is the far easier approach).
Next is Panorama and Pivot. Look at the new apps Phone, Calculator, Onedrive, Photos, and the Outlook pair of apps. The Phone app is especially painful to use because of the three 'tabs': History, Speed Dial, and Dial Pad. Your instinct is to swipe from left to right in order to reach the second and third tabs, but this has been intentionally disabled. They want you to tap the tiny little icons at the top, just like an Android app. Speaking of the competitor OS, A hamburger menu has been added to most new apps (and a few new old ones, like OneDrive).
The Photos application is now almost entirely useless because you cannot swipe in between folders (and the same goes for the new Photo picker API).
Not a single new application in the preview can be swiped from left to right.
This should be hugely alarming to all veteran WP users and we must rally against such an obvious departure to what we recognize as Windows Phone.
Counterargument: "This is merely an early preview and these new changes are not likely to stay". Not unless we are sufficiently vocal about it. The team spent time designing a hamburger menu and messing with the controls. I do realize that UI wasn't their biggest priority on this build, but they could have easily just used the older Pivot controls that were already available with no extra time or thought needed. Every design change they have made has taken WP closer to its competitors in a last-ditch effort to make potential consumers more acquainted with the platform.
tl;dr: Microsoft has dumbed-down the UI of WP10 to make it much easier to pick up for Android and iOS users. But in the process, they have made it absolutely terrible from a UX standpoint.
App Bar, Panorama, and Pivot. These amazing and unique Windows Phone continuities are now at risk for the future of the OS. This is evident, specifically in all of the new applications for Windows 10 for Phones (10051).
Let's start with App Bar. There have always been three dots which can be either tapped or swiped up in order to see more settings and other contextual 'buttons.' A subtle change they have made is making the three dots a physical button that can only be tapped and not swiped (which is the far easier approach).
Next is Panorama and Pivot. Look at the new apps Phone, Calculator, Onedrive, Photos, and the Outlook pair of apps. The Phone app is especially painful to use because of the three 'tabs': History, Speed Dial, and Dial Pad. Your instinct is to swipe from left to right in order to reach the second and third tabs, but this has been intentionally disabled. They want you to tap the tiny little icons at the top, just like an Android app. Speaking of the competitor OS, A hamburger menu has been added to most new apps (and a few new old ones, like OneDrive).
The Photos application is now almost entirely useless because you cannot swipe in between folders (and the same goes for the new Photo picker API).
Not a single new application in the preview can be swiped from left to right.
This should be hugely alarming to all veteran WP users and we must rally against such an obvious departure to what we recognize as Windows Phone.
Counterargument: "This is merely an early preview and these new changes are not likely to stay". Not unless we are sufficiently vocal about it. The team spent time designing a hamburger menu and messing with the controls. I do realize that UI wasn't their biggest priority on this build, but they could have easily just used the older Pivot controls that were already available with no extra time or thought needed. Every design change they have made has taken WP closer to its competitors in a last-ditch effort to make potential consumers more acquainted with the platform.
tl;dr: Microsoft has dumbed-down the UI of WP10 to make it much easier to pick up for Android and iOS users. But in the process, they have made it absolutely terrible from a UX standpoint.
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