ui
Drop-Down Button vs. Split Button
Drop-Down Button vs. Split Button
Interestingly, I think the former is best suited for most design objectives, as it integrates with the user’s flow (the user can’t ignore the choice). Whereas with the split button, the choice is optional.
Re: Facebook's predicament
And the old design we tested didn’t work very well on a 10-inch Netbook. A single story might not even fit on the viewport. Not to mention, many people who access the website every day only use Facebook through their PC—no mobile phones or tablets. Scrolling by clicking or dragging the browser scrollbar is still commonly done because not everyone has trackpads or scroll wheels. If more scrolling is required because every story is taller, or navigation requires greater mouse movement because it’s further away, then the site becomes harder to use. These people may not be early adopters or use the same hardware we do, but the quality of their experience matters just as much.
Julie Zhuo, product designer at Facebook, replies to Dustin Curtis.
There’s just a tremendous amount of craftsmanship in between a great idea and a great product
Twitter is fantastic in broadcast mode, but terrible in consumption mode.
Spot on analysis by Frédéric Filloux for the Monday Note. Twitter is great because broadcasters (heavy users) say so. But it’s still unfathomable for non-heavy users and those with very little following, like myself.
Twitter announced good numbers last week but it is failing in user growth. With a new interface, which could spawn a new approach to the product, Twitter can get its growth mojo back.
So Twitter product designers, solve this problem.