Eug
Lifer
Heheh. Thanks for reinforcing this point.lol true. Funny how it hasn't really changed that much.
It's precisely this attitude which has held back Linux-on-the-desktop, and probably for a time, Android as well.
Heheh. Thanks for reinforcing this point.lol true. Funny how it hasn't really changed that much.
Seriously? :|
I dunno, I think it makes a great deal of sense to move the menu button up for Calender since there's no other buttons on the bottom. This is a very, very weak complaint.
Not sure what you're getting at, buy my point was that before Android 4.0, the OS was quite behind iOS. It's a much closer race with 4.1.
Before 4.0, Google was emphasizing function, at the expense of form IMO. In 4.1 they're emphasizing both, which is what they should have been doing all along.
I think you have a point about inconsistencies, but I don't need little arrows to tell me how to use the "date picker." The faded out numbers above and below the selected number do a good job of telling you what to do without extraneous bits. Unless you're referring to something else.
Heheh. Thanks for reinforcing this point.
It's precisely this attitude which has held back Linux-on-the-desktop, and probably for a time, Android as well.
The phone is supposed to be a tool for me to get shit done, not fuck around on xda-developers to try to assemble a collection of least-shitty ui apps..
Huge no-no if you know anything about human factors. Inconsistent layouts make you scan the screen rather than use muscle memory to interface the system. Pitching your muscle memory against yourself is a surefire way to make mistakes.
Let me ask you,would you take an iPhone 5 with iOS 6 or with jellybean source that the apple engineers could tweak and perfect it the way they'd like but also gave you full flexibility to do what ever you'd like with it also.
Basically would you take an iPhone 5 running android and let me know why you would or wouldn't use it.
Huge no-no if you know anything about human factors. Inconsistent layouts make you scan the screen rather than use muscle memory to interface the system. Pitching your muscle memory against yourself is a surefire way to make mistakes.
I have a Galaxy Nexus with 4.1, 4.0.2 wasn't any better. Take a look at the contextual menu button location in the calendar versus google maps.
The date/time input dialog box (alarm clock) has been lifted from iOS in the worst possible fashion - there is nothing suggesting that you can "spin" the date pickers until you accidentally swipe across. Don't start in the middle though, because it will do something else. In 4.0.2 they had little up arrow down arrow thing that were clickable, suggesting that you should click up down to get it increment/decrement. Complete fucking disaster.
not sure what you are on about but its 100% obvious to use your finger to scroll on the clock, also nothing happens when i click in the middle of it.
That's an odd question, because that will never happen.Let me ask you,would you take an iPhone 5 with iOS 6 or with jellybean source that the apple engineers could tweak and perfect it the way they'd like but also gave you full flexibility to do what ever you'd like with it also.
In 4.1 they took away the arrows entirely (better), but there still isn't a proper 3d effect on the panels to suggest you should flick it up down. The faded numbers are still clickable, so the affordance suggests to click the faded number till you get what you want.
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Uhhh touchscreen habits for most in this case mean having used an iDevice to understand how their scrolling date picker/time picker works. Otherwise if you've never seen that, running into one of these would be confusing. I don't mind that they stole from iOS. They just stole and then implemented a horrible form of it.From touchscreen habits, I had simply assumed it could be scrolled then lo and behold it worked.
No. The arrow shows which way the wheel spins, get it? It's a slot machine wheel. That's the entire point of the design. That's completely obvious.
When you push a directional button on a machine that has a analog number wheel, the wheel turns in that direction, increasing the number.
It's actually makes perfect sense and lines up with real life, instead of something for you to complain about.
Now I hate the wheel format personally, and I prefer simply typing in the numbers, but that's a diferent conversation entirely.
The date picker is part of the android API, so is the location of the contextual menu. Some 80% of the apps have it top right, some apps have it elsewhere.
The phone is supposed to be a tool for me to get shit done, not fuck around on xda-developers to try to assemble a collection of least-shitty ui apps. This is literally the same thing that plagues Linux on desktop... google should be providing something with an awesome UI solution out of the box, not a halfass starting point. You clearly are missing this point.
Then there are those of us who simply put a tick next to 'automatic date and time' and have never even seen any of these date/time selector screens on any device. And even if I ever did need it (once every other decade or so I'm guessing) I'd rather be able to simply click and enter via keypad than scroll through numbers.![]()
For ICS users, this is absolutely a disaster IMO. I'm not a retard so I figured out they wanted us to flick scroll. I don't mind them stealing from iOS. It's a great feature IMO, but they did it in a broken manner.
Then there are those of us who simply put a tick next to 'automatic date and time' and have never even seen any of these date/time selector screens on any device. And even if I ever did need it (once every other decade or so I'm guessing) I'd rather be able to simply click and enter via keypad than scroll through numbers.
It amazes me the crap some people can find to baffle themselves with while 99.9% of everyone else simply moves on.
This pretty much sums up every one of your posts in this forum. Nothing that a bunch of iOS cheerleaders think is wrong with android is ever legitimate. Team iOS is annoying as hell.
Corrected that for you.
Then there are those of us who simply put a tick next to 'automatic date and time' and have never even seen any of these date/time selector screens on any device. And even if I ever did need it (once every other decade or so I'm guessing) I'd rather be able to simply click and enter via keypad than scroll through numbers.
It amazes me the crap some people can find to baffle themselves with while 99.9% of everyone else simply moves on.
Holy crap dude. Do you ever create meetings? Appointments? Alarms? Automatic time my ass.....
Why add scrolling if its confusing?
You act like the 2 seconds that it takes for someone to figure out how the UI works and then figure it out for the rest of their lives is some uniquely confusing time that causes permanent psychological harm. The homescreen in iOS doesn't make it clear that I can swipe from left to right to reach other apps. HOLY CRAP ITS BAD UI DESIGN. But this argument is less important.
Scrolling is a completely different scenario because in this case, its specifically invoking the image of the wheel to make a point. Scrolling on a computer is back and forth because the closest analog is a piece of paper. When you go down a piece of paper, you drag it from bottom up. However, a computer is not a piece of paper.
However, on a wheel there is no argument. When someone says rotate the wheel up, what direction is the wheel rotating? Down to up. There is no argument. Everyone gets it. If you see a wheel from the side, and tell the person to make the wheel go left, its going to turn counterclockwise. There is almost no argument to make it go the other way. A wheel has a very specific method of operation in everyones minds. We tend to be more tech savvy and we don't need to go through this thought process and just know how to use tech, but unless you can't figure out how society views how a wheel works, its pretty damn simple and you're just looking for things to complain about.
Dunno. I actually like the stolen iOS spin wheel. It just needs to be more clear that it's a spin wheel. The arrows in ICS were a huge mistake. So I like how it is in JB. I would like it to add the day of the week though as to me that's critical in posting calendar events. I shouldnt have to open an Outlook calendar or to look at the calendar hanging in my cube and refer to that while I use my phone.Adding alarms is a huuuge use case for me (reminders for market-related things), which is why I noticed how horrid the implementation of that very simple UI element is. If google had people versed in UI, something like this would've made it to the release already.
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Simple, clear affordance that makes it immediately clear how to interact with it.
http://blog.codeus.net/dateslider-1-0-an-alternative-datepicker-for-android/
Holy crap man. Your post sums up exactly why Team Android hates Team Apple. CHOICE. Openness. This is a clear cut case that CAN be interpreted multiple ways. According to you nothing is ever wrong.
The fact is that the arrow itself doesn't necessarily refer to spinning the wheel. The fact that there is a grayed value may suggest to some (myself included) that the arrow means to select the value above the highlighted. Yes I obviously figured it out that it refers to spinning and not dragging the wheel.
The point is it can be interpreted multiple ways:
- Is it spinning the wheel?
- Is it a +/- button? (what if you reversed the wheel? it just so happens the wheel spins in a +/- fashion)
- Is it referring to the value above or below? It's an arrow after all not a +/-.
The fact that you're insisting that there's only one way to look at it and it's clear cut makes you sound like as big of a douche as Steve Jobs. Yeah I HAVE to do it that way. No other option. That's exactly why Google removed the stupid arrows in JellyBean. Congrats.
Dunno. I actually like the stolen iOS spin wheel. It just needs to be more clear that it's a spin wheel. The arrows in ICS were a huge mistake. So I like how it is in JB. I would like it to add the day of the week though as to me that's critical in posting calendar events. I shouldnt have to open an Outlook calendar or to look at the calendar hanging in my cube and refer to that while I use my phone.