Posted 25 February 2009 - 10:32 AM
Good points doglesby.
I am not keen on the maximise view in Windows. A seasoned Windows user I was with the other day accidentally pressed something on her keyboard and spent the whole day in that maximised view with no obvious way to turn it off.
If you need to use a GUI, let it be simple and clean interfaces. This is what Apple did with the likes of the early GUI's (System 7 is by a lot of people reckoned to be close to perfect). I'm not saying we go back to that, bit it was supremely crisp and pretty much idiot proof (to this day, I still can't work out what the green button in the Mac OSX menu bar is supposed to do - who uses it, ever?). The other thing about it (even the more 3D OS8 and 9) is that the interface itself does not detract from the task at hand. As a designer, all the 'sweetie' buttons and even the window shading is just excess noise to what is going on in the window itself.
The new tab bars may be good for Windows users (who, let's face it, are far more used to non conforming and clumpy cluttered interfaces than Mac users are), but they break Apple's own interface design specification. On a Mac they are still fiddly to use as the grip area is reduced to a tiny corner triangle. Even in a single tab there is an extra two icons or controls on the top of the tab bar. This is added clutter. The old tabs could be simply moved without the need for the triangular 'grip' and had one simple close button.
The other issue comes from a general Mac OS interface issue. In the 'olde days', The front window was distinct and the background ones greyed or muted down. The latest Mac OS does not mute out the background windows very much and relies on the soft drop shadow to give 'depth' (which does not work at all on a dark desktop or if your windows are stacked almost exactly on one another. With this kind of design (the top tabs), if you have two or more Safari windows open and the frontmost window is slightly lower than the back ones, there is just a mess at the top of the screen. It is a visual overload of triangular grips and + symbols and you have to look very hard as to which bar is which.
My point is: the top of the bar has always been a window 'grip' - in every Mac OS ever made since the Finder was invented. This piddling around with the basic thing that makes Mac windows so tactile needs to be thought out a little more carefully than the Safari 4 dog's dinner that is being offered.
Opinions (for comment?) on other new Safari 4 items:
Top sites - hilarious, OTT, but slightly childish eye candy. I love it for its humour, but nothing else. It is a bit ugly, but cute in the way a ten year old might have made it.
Bookmarks with coverflow. I rarely use cover flow in iTunes and never in the Finder, but it is a fun idea. Bookmarks are notoriously hard to organise and Safari was always lacking from day one. This use of cover flow is better - a little bit. I can't seem to get any of the preview pages to show unless I visit the bookmarked site - not very handy if you have a lot of bookmarks!
The blue load bar in the address field. Bring that back, that was inspired interface design (as well as being very cool looking). The little 'gear' wheel is just overused now!