-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Jonathan Meek wrote on 07/09/11 19:33: > > Actually, I intended something more in depth than that. I asked one of > the designers and am going to attempt to begin work on a comprehensive > HIG. Everything about the design needs to be thought out, not just > 'integrate with this.' The problem with this undertaking is that there > are so few applications that can be considered "Ubuntu" applications. > Less and more than you would think. (Though, I've only heard from one > person, and his design choices may not be the consensus of the entire > design team) >...
I'd hope it isn't. ;-) But Thorsten Wilms was right: what will developers make out of it? Interface guidelines are useless unless they actually change developers' behavior. For example, Microsoft has extensive Windows UX guidelines on MSDN, but given all the "copying Apple" worry in this thread, it seems nobody here has even heard of them. Now, imagine these responses from application developers if you wrote some interface guidelines for Ubuntu: * "Ubuntu design guidelines? I've never heard of them." * "Jonathan Meek? I've never heard of him. Why should I do what he says?" * "Ubuntu? Ubuntu's just a distro, what business do they have setting 'guidelines' for applications?" * "I use Fedora for development, why should I care what Ubuntu wants?" * "Ubuntu? You want me to take advice from the people who designed Unity? Hah!" * "I read a couple of pages but it was really boring." * "Gnome already has guidelines, this is just another example of Ubuntu trying to go their own way. Shame on them." Improving the design of Ubuntu applications is a design problem in itself. And even if those criticisms are unfair, they're going to come up. So if you want to make a difference, you need to have a way to minimize, or be able to address, each of those criticisms. > Provisionally, Mr. Gifford is correct. The are going to be started on, > and presented for peer review. I'm debating how to go about this now > less than I am whether to go about it at all. > > I would like some opinions to feedback into this. I know what the > designer said were good designed Ubuntu applications, but what do > people here think are some? And why do you think that? (This includes, > looks, structure, and behavior as well as integration.) >... This is the biggie. If guidelines are to be credible, they need to be either self-evidently logical, demonstrated to succeed in real Ubuntu applications, and/or written by people who designed successful Ubuntu applications. The Windows, Mac, and iOS guidelines can all use applications designed by the OS vendor as examples of what to do. But there are very few applications targeted for Ubuntu first, let alone Ubuntu exclusively. I think guidelines will be premature until that changes. - -- mpt -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ iEYEARECAAYFAk52NFkACgkQ6PUxNfU6ecrfYACgu152ebybXC0EsGhgSQ/nBtU0 g5kAnixYzKSiFcdmQjkxVCmZUR56wAgB =0RD1 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~ayatana Post to : ayatana@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~ayatana More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp