--
Gergő Erdősi
One should possibly also take this request to the joomla.org
frontpage, so more people become aware of this...
UX and UI experts might not follow the Joomla! CMS Development mailing
list too closely.
On 27 Mai, 22:06, Gerg‘ Erd‘si <gergo.erd...@joomline.org> wrote:
> There has been a lot of talk recently about the Joomla! administrator
> interface being stale and needing a refresh. It is true that it hasn't
> changed a lot in the last few years and it is past time to start
> thinking about making improvements. We are looking for designers and
> usability experts to show us how you imagine the Joomla! administrator
> interface. How would you improve it? Please send your thoughts and
> ideas in the form of mockups to the mailing list so that we can see
> what you have in mind and discuss them. We would like to see what you
> have in mind within the next couple of weeks, so please send in your
> mockups by June 21th in jpg or png format.
>
> --
> Gerg‘ Erd‘si
@Hannes
Change and development is a good thing, not something you should be
scared of :) If we do not develop, our users will soon find others
that do.
I would like improvements to be available as soon as possible, yes. If
you come up with something that makes my clients' life (and hence my
life) easier, then I want to start using it yesterday! What can be
better than happy and pleased clients and users? Small incremental
changes should never be scary, just welcome and much needed
improvements.
The 1.5.0 RC arrived about 2 years before 1.6 Alpha (given that it
arrives in June). I think two years is a long time to only do
bugfixes, and not being able to tweak the UI for instance.
Now, a (great!) initiative has been launched, but it's just 4 weeks
before the scheduled Alpha release. Do we really spend 2 years fixing
bugs and then just do a last-minute 4 weeks work on the UI?
I feel that the world has moved forward the passed five years, but
Joomla (UI in particular, being so closely related to Mambo 4.5) has
not moved much at all.
I really don't like that statement because you have to think to exist.
To me "don't make me think" breeds complacency. I prefer "be
intuative" or "assist me to solve my problem in a logical an easy
way". I know it's semantics but the intent is quite different. To me
"don't make me think" is creating lazy brains. Why do you think Brain
Training on the Nintendo DS sells so well :P
Regards,
Andrew Eddie
http://www.theartofjoomla.com - the art of becoming a Joomla developer
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