From the insightful (and fun-to-read) David Pogue regarding the
upcoming Office 2010:
"To find Backstage, you click the File menu. (Yes, it actually says File
again; Microsoft ditched the baffling, unlabeled upper-left orb of the
previous version. Microsoft always brags about its exhaustive
focus-group sessions — how could they have missed that one?)"
Full article:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/03/technology/personaltech/03pogue.html?nl=technology&emc=cta2
I hope Firefox can avoid making the same mistake...
Perhaps the planned "Firefox" button could make the current menu
appear/hide (instead of creating a new - and likely worse - menu system).
--
Regards,
Peter Lairo
Bugs I think are important:
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=250539
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=391057
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=436259
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=446444
Islam: http://www.jihadwatch.org/islam101/
Israel: http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/myths2/
Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster: http://www.venganza.org/
Anthropogenic Global Warming skepsis: http://tinyurl.com/AGW-Skepsis
> It seems Microsoft might have realized it made a mistake in removing the
> menu from it's flagship office product:
>
> From the insightful (and fun-to-read) David Pogue regarding the upcoming
> Office 2010:
>
> "To find Backstage, you click the File menu. (Yes, it actually says File
> again; Microsoft ditched the baffling, unlabeled upper-left orb of the
> previous version. Microsoft always brags about its exhaustive focus-group
> sessions — how could they have missed that one?)"
>
> Full article:
> http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/03/technology/personaltech/03pogue.html?nl=technology&emc=cta2
>
>
I am only running the 2010 beta so this may have changed in a newer update.
It's not a menu, at least not the traditional popup menu. There is a sidebar
with the traditional basic file menu options but it also switches away from
the document to a tabbed view not unlike the mockups for the new preferences
dialog. It reminds me quite a bit of the home tab concept but the actual UI
element behaves as a checkbox rather than a tab (click once to switch, again
to switch back to the document).
> I hope Firefox can avoid making the same mistake...
>
> Perhaps the planned "Firefox" button could make the current menu
> appear/hide (instead of creating a new - and likely worse - menu system).
>
Perhaps the Firefox menu can trigger the home tab? I don't think it showing
the menu bar is natural (at least when I play through it in my head, it
doesn't seem that way). The Firefox menu at least has the word "Firefox" on
it which is at least a step above Microsoft's Orb (which I did not realize
was a menu until I saw someone use it).
I also have to say that traditional menus require more dexterity and motor
control than the ribbon found in 2010 so I would not be so quick to predict
that a new system would be worse (it will probably be worse in some aspects
but certainly not all - that would be a huge failure). In terms of the
"Grandmother test," Office 2010's interface does quite well for this metric.
-Rob
That was the part that was least changed in Office 2007 anyway, in that once
you realized it was a button and replaced the file menu and knew what was there
before in the file menu, you could at least find it (extra clicking though). It
made Office almost unusable for me, after 3 years and with modifications
to help me that most users would not find, I use it now once a week to
record some numbers into a spreadsheet, and less often to convert a table
to HTML coding. Before Office 2007, I spent several hours a day on Excel.
The only thing that really helps is keyboard shortcuts, and improved
context menus, and from what I've read something bad is going to happen
to the context menus.
changed.
.
Also, comparisons between browsers and office software are a little spurrious. The point of office software is to edit and act on content, the point of a web browser is to help navigate to content which is then acted upon by the web application and its UI.
cheers,
mike
----- Reply message -----
From: "David McRitchie" <fire...@verizon.net>
Date: Fri, Jun 4, 2010 12:01 pm
Subject: Reconsidering ditching the menu in Firefox 4
To: <dev-apps...@lists.mozilla.org>
"Rob Arnold" <tel...@gmail.com> wrote in message news:mailman.1828.1275658235...@lists.mozilla.org...
> On Fri, Jun 4, 2010 at 9:14 AM, Peter Lairo <Pe...@lairo.com> wrote:
>
>> It seems Microsoft might have realized it made a mistake in removing the
>> menu from it's flagship office product:
>>
>> From the insightful (and fun-to-read) David Pogue regarding the upcoming
>> Office 2010:
>>
>> "To find Backstage, you click the File menu. (Yes, it actually says File
>> again; Microsoft ditched the baffling, unlabeled upper-left orb of the
>> previous version. Microsoft always brags about its exhaustive focus-group
>> sessions — how could they have missed that one?)"
.
_______________________________________________
dev-apps-firefox mailing list
dev-apps...@lists.mozilla.org
https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-apps-firefox
I agree. I use my menu all the time. I would hate it if the menu were
simply gone. If some people want to hide it, let them do that, but let
me keep my menu available.
> On 2010/06/04 6:14, Peter Lairo wrote:
>
>> Perhaps the planned "Firefox" button could make the current menu
>> appear/hide (instead of creating a new - and likely worse - menu system).
>>
>
It's faster, cleaner and simpler. Unlikely to be "worse".
> I agree. I use my menu all the time. I would hate it if the menu were
> simply gone. If some people want to hide it, let them do that, but let me
> keep my menu available.
>
The old menu structure will be available — and indeed, the default on
systems that have strong menu conventions in their OS, like OS X and Windows
XP — and you can always turn it on if you want to use it on a system that
doesn't, e.g. Windows 7.
--
Alexander Limi · Firefox User Experience Team · http://limi.net
Sounds more like they just should have made it more obvious. But they
didn't. They automatically assumed that people would know that it was a
menu.
Labeling it better should avoid that issue.
--
------------------------------------------------------
~Omega X
MozillaZine Nightly Tester
I haven't seen that. Can you describe it to me? How is it faster,
cleaner or simpler than simple menu?
Timo Pietilä
We redesigned the menu layout to be more in line with how browsers are used,
and did a Test Pilot study that showed the same usage in the wild, and made
some additional adjustments based on those numbers.
- (non-final) layout:
https://bug556174.bugzilla.mozilla.org/attachment.cgi?id=448663
- Test Pilot data, visualized:
http://blog.mozilla.com/faaborg/2010/03/23/visualizing-usage-of-the-firefox-menu-bar/
Recently closed tabs
Check for updates
I also sometimes use Bookmarks/Add a bookmark
That is usually only if I am on a page with Flash which often seems to
disable some hot keys (ie CTRL+D does not respond)
These also showed a lot of use in the labs
Are these menu entries going to appear somewhere obvious?
(By the way I haven't seen anyone else mention this - Flash on a page (eg
YouTube) will often disable keys such as
CTRL+PageUp or CTRL+D)
John Bird
> - (non-final) layout:
> https://bug556174.bugzilla.mozilla.org/attachment.cgi?id=448663
> - Test Pilot data, visualized:
>
> http://blog.mozilla.com/faaborg/2010/03/23/visualizing-usage-of-the-firefox-menu-bar/
>
>
> --
> Alexander Limi ? Firefox User Experience Team ? http://limi.net
>
>
Thanks for the screen-shot.
A cursory study of the data seems to indicate that users strongly favor
the Bookmarks and Copy & Paste menu items. All the others: much less.
Have you considered making the Firefox button make the current menu
slide into view?
Why are the Extension menu items *below* the Exit item?
Would the release notes not fit better with the help items?
I do not see any item to show the status bar. I take it that that will
be permanent? That would be a good idea anyway. It is too useful not
to have it.
> I was bemused to notice that the new menu layout does not include the two
> or three entries I use the most:
>
> Recently closed tabs
>
The plan is to have it appear in the tab overflow menu.
> Check for updates
>
Appears in the About window that shows what your current version is. (of
course, FF checks for updates for you in the background too)
Does this include the "Apply downloaded update now" menu item? I find
having quick access to that is incredibly useful, being on nightlies and
only wanting to update when its convient (ie, not when the update dialog
pops up).
- Blair
Cheers,
Shawn
- Blair
-chofmann
Drew
On 6/9/10 8:17 PM, Blair McBride wrote:
> Agreed - but I think its just a more extreme example of a "normal user"
> scenario. If you dismiss the software update dialog, there's no other
> visual indication that there's an update waiting to be applied. You
> either need to close and restart the browser, or remember that you
> dismissed an update dialog some time in the past and didn't restart. Of
> course, this only really applies to people who keep their browser open
> for extended periods of time.
>
> - Blair
>
>
>
> On 10/06/2010 2:52 p.m., Shawn Wilsher wrote:
>> On 6/9/2010 7:37 PM, Blair McBride wrote:
>>> Does this include the "Apply downloaded update now" menu item? I find
>>> having quick access to that is incredibly useful, being on nightlies
>>> and only wanting to update when its convient (ie, not when the update
>>> dialog pops up).
>> I don't think we should be optimizing the UI for what nightly users want
>> for what it is worth. Most of our users aren't nightly users.
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Shawn
>>
>>
>>
The main thing that is still in the way to accomplishing silent updates
is the applying of the update on startup which doesn't involve the
prompt to update which is my current focus.
Robert
To find Backstage, you click the File menu. (Yes, it actually says File
> again; Microsoft ditched the baffling, unlabeled upper-left orb of the
> previous version. Microsoft always brags about its exhaustive focus-group
> sessions — how could they have missed that one?)
>
The key word in there is "unlabeled." This statement however is in no
Microsoft going back on any of their other decisions, it is simply
acknowledging that having the main controls for the application placed under
a menu that is impossible to say or write (it was an image of the complex
Office logo [1]) made it impossible to communicate. It was kind of like
when Prince lost the rights to his own name and became "the artist formerly
known as prince" but was otherwise represented by this crazy symbol you
can't type or say [2]. Instead of "the menu formerly known as File" they
went with "the orb" in their own communications but no one really knew to
call it that.
This is not a problem for us, we have a "Firefox button" that displays a
"Firefox menu" (text, not icon). This contains all of the commands related
to controlling Firefox (and as such is an accurate name). Also even prior
to the Microsoft's changes in 2010, the UX team discussed the need to avoid
a prince menu (for instance, all of the similar application menu controls in
Windows 7 use an icon for their orbs [3]).
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Office2007toolbar.png
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Prince_logo.svg
[3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Paint_7.png
As mentioned, updates will move to being totally background, and the
majority of our users will enjoy that functionality. However, our data
shows that on days when we release new versions of Firefox, a
significant portion of users want to manually check for updates.
cheers,
mike
> I hope Firefox can avoid making the same mistake...
And since Microsoft ditched it, Firefox must do the same,
and when Microsoft repented of its folly, Firefox must do the same. Right?
Lemming see, Lemming do.
…which they can still do via the About window/page that will show the
current version and offers a button to check manually for updates.
Wrong. Microsoft is not an ignorant organization; and they usually don't
do things without a lot of thought and research. The least we should do
is keep an eye on their decisions and take them seriously. We should not
blindly follow what they do - obviously.
> Lemming see, Lemming do.
There's no need for asinine insults.
PS. You might find this enlightening:
http://www.theaugeanstables.com/reflections-from-second-draft/cognitive-egocentrism/
cheers,
mike
How about putting it in the About dialog?
- A
> How about putting it in the About dialog?
Keep reading!
cheers,
mike
Yay!
- A
Or you could ship nightly/beta releases with certain extra menu
options. They could then be hidden for stable releases. People who
want a "Check for Updates" menu option because they're nightly testers
would have it, while the general user would not be bothered by its
absence.
yeah I think that's reasonable. We are including a Feedback menu on the
navigational toolbar with a variety of tools for the beta program, so it's
not going to be totally unprecedented for betas and nightly builds to have
slightly different functionality from the final product.
-Alex