[haiku] Re: Haiku UI Redesign.
- From: "Tom Shirley" <tugboat@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: <haiku@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2008 18:30:20 -0600
It looks good, like a natural progression of BeOS.
However, please leave in the option to use the default "normal" theme.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Sean Healy" <jalopeura@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <haiku@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2008 1:27 PM
Subject: [haiku] Re: Haiku UI Redesign.
Ari Haviv wrote:
On Mon, Dec 22, 2008 at 10:35 AM, kallisti5 <kallisti5@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
lol..
I do really like what John did with it. He really didn't go nuts and
kept
the BeOS feel while making it look more updated. Quite a few commenter
also agree that they like it. There are some in the thread that say the
use
of rounded corners will take extra cpu time but most of us have more
then
enough cpu to spare ;)
A few rounded corners and shadows can make a big difference. I think
the UI is still too flat and could stand out a bit more, like Mac OS
9.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/9/9f/Mac_OS_9_screenshot_2.png
I didn't see any shadow around the menu...maybe that would also be a
nice touch. I think that the top right corner of the menu should be
straight so that it is aligned with the bottom of the menu bar.
The simpler the better in my opinion. I turned off the animations and
other bells and whistles in my XP. I liked BeOS's simplicity. I don't
*want* Haiku to look "Mac-y". I don't think it needs to look "modern".
I don't think we need to try to attract mainstream desktop users; they
will prefer Windows or Mac no matter what we do. We don't need to
evangelize Haiku; it should speak for itself. I saw a guy in the next
cubicle using BeOS and asked him about it, downloaded Personal Edition and
was hooked within a week.
Rounded corners and shadows and all that stuff is nice eye candy, but if
Haiku goes that way, I want the option to turn it off - especially since I
will likely be running it on an older machine where every cycle counts.
(Not that I don't think the mockup looks nice - it certainly does. But if
that's what I wanted, I probably would be sticking with Windows or Mac,
not eagerly awaiting R1.)
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