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by devnullbrain
371 days ago
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I find it surprising that skeumorphism is popular here: the rationale is the opposite of the rationale for power-user desktop UIs. I suppose it's easy to grok what the newsstand is[1], but I'm not convinced it would matter after the first five minutes. [1] Because I've seen it in US media, along with the route symbol on the maps icon and the fire hydrants that are in captchas. |
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I don't know how well connected it is to the power-user axis, but I would say a characteristic power-user doesn't care that they are looking a somewhat garish and busy collection of colored icons, gradients, bezels, etc, whereas the opposite sensibility favors a minimalist UI for the aesthetics over perhaps ease of locating things. The real opposite of a power-user is not a first-time user, its a non-user. The non-user is not annoyed that they can't find things that are hidden away in secret trays you have to swipe for or such, but they appreciate the resulting saved screen-space.