Re: [Usability] Future of the menu top bar?]
- From: Matthew Paul Thomas <mpt myrealbox com>
- To: Gnome usability <usability gnome org>
- Subject: Re: [Usability] Future of the menu top bar?]
- Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 14:02:32 +1200
Microsoft's Web site used to contain a document discussing the design
of Windows 95, including a paragraph or two on why they had placed the
taskbar at the bottom instead of the top. I can't find it now, though I
did find a paper on the design process that produced the taskbar.
<http://www.microsoft.com/usability/UEPostings/The%20WindowsSUP®-
SUP%2095%20User%20Interface%20A%20Case%20Study%20in%20Usability%20Engine
ering.htm>
On May 12, 2006, at 6:08 AM, Shane M. Coughlan wrote:
...
Semiotics would suggest that the placement of the menu at the top of
the screen is not fitting psychologically. The 'top' is generally
understood to be ideological in Western cultures, with the left area
being given to known information, the right to new information, and
the bottom to data with less priority or the status of predictability
(much the same as the left).
Citations, please.
...
- From the perspective of traditional semiotics it would make sense to
have ideological data like application names and/or documentation
names at the top, but to have predictable active objects on the left
of the screen. The middle and right of the screen should contain new
information like dynamic user data (desktop?).
...
I double dog dare you to define "ideological data" with reference to
human-computer interfaces.
Cheers
--
Matthew Paul Thomas
http://mpt.net.nz/
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