| "a little line like this _, two layered squares []], and an X. What do those do? Obviously, they minimize, 'restore', and close the window. Why 'obviously'? These symbols are not intrinsically 'obvious'." True, they make no sense. A Mac user who has never used Windows will not understand them. On OS X, the buttons have the colors of a traffic light (red=close, yellow=minimize, green=zoom). Windows users trying a Mac for the first time understand this instantly. "They have become a standard since roughly the days of Windows 3.1." No, Windows 3.1 had different buttons [1]. The 'standard' you're referring to was introduced 3 years later, in Windows 95. "We expect them to be there, and I prefer the icons to a little status bar that says "Minimize, Restore, Close."" Sure, you can get used to anything, just like you can learn what math symbols and traffic signs mean. That doesn't make it intuitive, quite the opposite. "Consider a recent example - the share icon" There is no such thing as 'the share icon'. Looking at the Google Image results, there are tons of different icons that are supposed to mean 'share'. If there is one share icon that I see a lot, it's "arrow jumping out of a window frame" [2]. "Let's consider that it might actually be important to push new icons into the public icon lexicon." Sure, but that only works if everyone implements them and even then, those buttons will need to be accompanied by text labels for at least five years. [1] http://www.microsoft.com/typography/ttfinst/ttfinst8.gif [2] http://bit.ly/10IELWe |
Nope, that's not obvious either. Also a result of convention.