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#101
Originally Posted by Rushmore View Post
Jeesh. We need to just get these darn N900's and see how things are with the final product that ships- maybe we will be surprised- even with the phone function

We already know the other stuff will rock.
Meanwhile, there's at least 300 of us who don't know what's fixed or not fixed but have a mandate to report our findings... including opinions.
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#102
Originally Posted by ragnar View Post
I guess if people would ask at the same time that why aren't more Nokians actively involved in these forums and at the same time would read the general tone and respect level of the individual messages, for instance in this particular thread, you would perhaps see some hints of the potential conflict built within.

i.e. semirandom people calling you incompetent based on some design detail does not really encourage you to actively participate in these discussions. Just as an observation. Hopefully I won't get flamed for this also.
I would simply have thanked your original post, but I didn't agree with all of it. I do, however, agree with what I've quoted above, and I really appreciate you and Peter and Quim coming here, intelligently discussing all the stuff that you do, and returning despite occasional, undeserved abuse. (E.g., the turkey who posted his childish "Message" about device release delays "To Nokia, Peter" etc. I'm embarrassed even to be on the same forum as that garbage and refused to dignify the thread with a counter-post on it.)

So, I (and I'm sure many others here) totally get (as in "grok" or "understand") what you're saying in the quotation above. Thanks (again) for coming to this forum and honestly participating on it.
 

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#103
Originally Posted by GeneralAntilles View Post
This, unfortunately, is not the open source way.
It may be... for starters, if the open source developer is hired by a corporation although then the corporation is customer rather than user.

On more global and independent scale is also possible, but involves those who care to pay the developer(s) so developer(s) have incentive besides usual such as scratching itch etc. Given parent is talking about customer one may assume he meant paying customer. A bounty hunt program has potency for viable ecosystem.

Also, I believe when developer is helped in other aspects such as translation and artwork, it feels less like their solo project and feels like getting help therefore more open to suggestions whereas if its only negative criticism or bad bug reports attitude may be something like 'this isn't fun anymore...' although not everyone gives same value to this.

Oh well, bounty system was discussed before...
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#104
There had better be a community group hug when the N900's finally arrive
 

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#105
Originally Posted by Texrat View Post
...and I hope none of that has come from my posts. I do get genuinely irritated with what I perceive to be quirks (can't call them bugs) but I am not going to make that personal. My only issue with your responses per se, ragnar, is a stubborn refusal to even consider that there may be merit in the customer's input and feedback. IMO that contradicts the spirit of openness Maemo is trying to foster.
Sorry but the insight about UI in [this] community, and software design in general (not only FOSS), is seriously lacking. Thankfully, we have HIG for that. There is one person who IMO stands out. Who made refreshing, insightful contributions to UI albeit with feedback from others. That person is wazd.

I am rather glad some vocal people here don't have the UI their way because else it'd be a mess. Or they simply refuse to understand implications of their request, do not understand why their compare is invalid, such as with universal rotation/portrait mode discussion. The reason they don't get their way is because Nokia's UI team has a spine and stands behind their product, and because they are the experts within their field. Not the user! The user did not design or know the HIG as if its his bible!

Note this is something different than saying user's opinion is worth nada!! The customer input is feedback as-is where a Nokia UI designer may or may not put value in. The customer is not always right! The customer is perhaps made to believe he is always right, but those people who make him believe that are hired to do so and not honest in their motive, or able to express in a more tactful manner. It is also important to understand the background of the user! In every usability study I've read this was taken into account! PalmOS user, Symbian user, iPhone user, and even the desktop is what is relevant in such contexts.

Important reason for layers between engineers and end-users for unless mutual respect is given they don't mix too well. So, you let layers inbetween weed out the conclusions or useful tidbits. Those layers are qgil, peter, community council, and perhaps on behalf of UI team ragnar. On something like FOSDEM its different, there you can get direct interaction, because its developers among developers instead of 'pesky' end users who are indirectly paying; the paycheck comes from ie. Nokia! Its much akin to Obama not writing his own speech, disclaimer on corporate blogs, or spokesperson of VIP dealing with blog.

1) Tabs in and of themselves are not a bad thing. They have tremendous value in certain contexts. One of those is in partitioning information so as to prevent "infinite" scrolling. I'm sure you know very well that tabs were originally implemented on websites to solve that very problem. So I don't understand an abject prejudice against them as a UI element. They're useful.
Tabs, including in browsers, were added to solve task bar cluttering allowing further cluttering the context of browser stayed in browser, and various browser windows can define various contexts albeit without official tagging support; ie. it is virtual; user is context-aware, OS or browser is not.

Now, let us assume MicroB in Fremantle has tab support. OK...

First problem: how is user going to switch back and forth inbetween these tabs? Look at how Fennec does that. It isn't easy to implement this well. The previews are rather small, and Fennec sacrifices its swipe right to left for this functionality. (Personally, I'm not sure what I prefer... yet.)

Next, this gives Dashboard potentially more windows while also rendering Dashboard somewhat useless because it has no support for tabs. So some windows would be previewed and even live rendered whereas others would not. While this could be added for example by allowing the user to select the window and browse through the tabs (in an elegant way perhaps a pseudo Dashboard... which MobileSafari has (without live rendering)), it may lead to user not able to find their tabs at all anymore, and it is exception which breaks HIG. _If_ you are going to implement such in browser there will be other tasks where it is appropriate and people will say '..but he does it too' hence welcome new addition to HIG.

Otherwise, the difference between tabs and windows is rather minimal, especially if you lack a taskbar containing your windows. It may be something to consider perhaps later. Hence, it becomes 'leave as is' and 'stick to HIG'.

And now the reason why the browser should not have tabs: the user should not have 4 windows with 4 tabs open. It is a waste of memory and space contrary to the way the user is meant to interact with browser for it has bookmarks, awesome bar, history. The point is very much getting things done and be done with them instead of keeping too much open.

Tabs alone are not the issue and there is no reason to be so pedantic about them as if they were. The issue is allowing customers to segregate list items by state, something they already have the ability to do on numerous platforms, especially cell phones. Maemo is now taking that ability away without offering an equivalent functionality. People accustomed to filtering/sorting call history are not going to like that functionality arbitrarily going away.
They are arriving at new platform with new UI paradigms. Another reason is that device is 'also a phone'. Symbian was from ground up an OS for phones, and its phone related features ofcourse became polished after time. In Symbian on non-touchscreen device, it makes a lot of sense to quickly browse through tabs. Size of checkbox is not important. In a stylus/touch-based device perhaps as well... but in a finger/touch-based device this is more difficult.

Different filters do make sense, but why the rush? See my comment below about respect!

You seem to think that simply because only a handful have complained here that we won't represent the norm... but, again, that ignores the people coming to the N900 from platforms already providing this common functionality.
By insisting wanting their previous UI paradigm without trying out new they are not giving N900/Maemo 5 a fair chance, and are wasting not only their own time but also hours. What you want for feedback is something of substance: for example, A) a very well documented user experience where a user sat down and wrote down her exact experience ([1], [2], [3]) or it was recorded ([4]), or B) where person used software & hardware for a while and accepted and embraced the way they work and work from that starting point addressing its strengths and weaknesses. C) I'm not aware of any C! And, doing A is either expensive or requires a lot of time and a good setup. I loved the format, thoroughness, and style of [1] but the links are dead. If anyone can revive the links I'd very much appreciate!!

It makes no sense complaining your Lamborghini isn't easy to handle in middle of Amsterdam because its just so much easier to use a Mini in centre. But if you're used to a Lamborghini, driving a Mini is very different, and immediately complaining about its shortcomings without trying it out for a while understanding its strengths and work from what it is rather than what others are is what is required. This is respecting the hard work of those who contributed to the end product!.

I'm personally a big fan of a company that distributes 300 devices, asks for feedback, and LISTENS.
Maybe someone else should listen and provide dept. (in this case UI team) the conclusions of feedback.

And please take the "asking for every feature" meme off the table.
Users are very unrealistic and believe in abacadabra. They, sometimes literally, tend to believe developers are wizards. The developers are the parents, the users the children. Children are bright at time, and one should not ignore their expression, but given the parent (and teachers etc etc) are the wise with the experience and knowledge children do need guidance of their experts, and accept them as such.

[1] GNOME 2.6, KDE 3.3 (links dead...)
[2] KDE 3.2
[3] SUN GNOME 2001
[4] Example prices of usability studies...
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#106
Originally Posted by ragnar View Post
Somebody might get 8 calls from separate persons and miss the information for the 9th call? Well, scroll downwards.
If there is user feedback there is 'more than 8' then that is plausible.

Scrolling down goes much faster than on e.g. Symbian where you need to click down various times in order to scroll down whereas its quick to go left or right. Compare with your Nokia E71's messaging system (not Nokia Messaging, the ancient one). Speaking of which, while I like the navigation and its consistent with rest of UI (which Nokia Messaging is not!) it shows even 'Outbox' when its empty. Useless IMO. Same for 'Draft'. And some others.

I don't know the UI in this case btw so take with grain of salt but maybe the swipe right to left or left to right can visually bring one to a dashboard where avatar with what was last performed (with extra accent on those 'missed') is shown, or allowing a way to allow the user to define filters. Although I'd first wait for more feedback.
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#107
allnameswereout, no offense but you surprise me with that lengthy post above. You are usually very good at getting the essential point of my posts-- but with that one you missed by a mile. On every single quote, amazingly enough.

Well... it's gonna happen now and then.

Originally Posted by allnameswereout
Important reason for layers between engineers and end-users for unless mutual respect is given they don't mix too well. So, you let layers inbetween weed out the conclusions or useful tidbits. Those layers are qgil, peter, community council, and perhaps on behalf of UI team ragnar
Please note my signature below.

Also note I have 20+ years in software design and development, including usability studies, quality assurance and UI design.
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Last edited by Texrat; 2009-10-29 at 05:38.
 
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#108
Originally Posted by buurmas View Post
No, Flock is an offshoot of Firefox with social-networking integration (Facebook, Twitter, etc.). Fennec is Firefox Mobile.

Interesting idea, though. If the N900 is supposed to be a mobile computer where people are texting, doing social networking, and making the occasional phone call, then it seems like the more social networking integration the better. But that said, there might be better ways to do it than Flock. Honestly, I didn't even know Flock was that popular.
I thought Flock was a rival to Firefox started by developers who broke off from the Firefox people. Furthermore, this said it was for mobile units. Well, I've used it a lot on real desktops. It was fine, supposedly focused on social groups. I didn't bother to reinstall it after running it lots, but there was nothing wrong with it.
 
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#109
Originally Posted by Nitchers View Post
RevdKathy

Now I'm awake at 3am worrying whether I should cancel!


Yikes.. this is going to another level...I'm up at 3am too!!! (ok so i'm working nightshift)

I'm concerned also but surely these missing notifications etc will be rectified within weeks of the device being released. Or am i being naive?
3am is the new noon, didn't you know? <g>
 
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#110
Originally Posted by Texrat View Post
"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds." -Ralph Waldo Emerson
That's "small minds", Google tells me.
 
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