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Firefox To Replace Menus With Office Ribbon

Barence writes "Mozilla has announced that its plans to bring Office 2007's Ribbon interface to Firefox, as it looks to tidy up its 'dated' browser. 'Starting with Vista, and continuing with Windows 7, the menu bar is going away,' notes Mozilla in its plans for revamping the Firefox user interface. '[It will] be replaced with things like the Windows Explorer contextual strip, or the Office Ribbon, [which is] now in Paint and WordPad, too.' The change will also bring Windows' Aero Glass effects to the browser." Update: 09/24 05:01 GMT by T : It's not quite so simple, says Alexander Limi, who works on the Firefox user experience. "We are not putting the Ribbon UI on Firefox. The article PCpro quotes talks about Windows applications in general, not Firefox." So while the currently proposed direction for Firefox 3.7 involves some substantial visual updates for Windows users (including a menu bar hidden by default, and integration of Aero-styled visual elements), it's not actually a ribbon interface. Limi notes, too, that Linux and Mac versions are unaffected by the change.

72 of 1,124 comments (clear)

  1. Eyecandy in cost of usability by sopssa · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In my opinion this is a really, really dumb move. While its all eye-candy and nice, it brings down the usability a lot. If you want to get to the menu, you have to find some button from somewhere obscure location and then the menu will be vertical to begin with, like right-clicking. On top of that its one extra mouse click. I hate the same thing with Office. Another good example is MSN Messenger. I can never find the menu button, and when I do the menu looks just retarted.

    The ironic thing is that a menubar is the least intrusive UI object on the screen. It's small, it doesn't get in the way and it goes nicely along with title bar. And you still find everything easily and fast from it.

    This doesn't "tidy up" 'dated' browser. There a lot more issues to look at, like UI responsiveness, fast drawing of loading websites and better & smoother scrolling, in which Firefox is actually lacking behind (still wins IE tho, but thats not much)

    Another sad thing about this is that it forges Windows UI style to Linux and other OS, and stops being consistent with the rest of the system.

    Gladly I'm not Firefox user, and even less so with this. It seems Firefox is going more and more to the way of grandma-understands-too. While I myself more and more like the approach Opera takes; feels like a complete suite for browsing. Maybe it'll gain more marketshare for Opera in power users, who still value usability and the simple efficient things like menu bars.

    1. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by Jaysyn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I agree.  Thankfully, I'm sure there will be a theme or add-on to fix this GUI abortion.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    2. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by COMON$ · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Actually the ribbon style is not built for eye candy but rather for usability. The problem with menu style systems is that it is not intuitive. There is resistance to the change because of 'menus are the way we are used to doing things' not necessarily the way things should be done. Putting features in front of the user rather than 3 to 4 deep in a menu system is far more intuitive. In fact I think the office ribbon layout is due to a massive amount of consumer research on Microsoft's Behalf. (I cant find a reference for that right now).

      However, I will believe this change when I see it.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    3. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by oldspewey · · Score: 5, Funny

      You know what you are?

      You're a ribbon bully!

      --
      If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
    4. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by spun · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Good point. However, Microsoft Bob was also the result of advanced research into user interface design. So was Clippy. Microsoft has a way of taking very innovative ideas and stripping them of all sanity and usefulness.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    5. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It really isn't about the elements that they use but how they implement it.

      Ribbons for some apps can greatly improve the UI.
      Menus for other apps can do the same.

      Bad Ribbons can make things really bad.
      So can bad Menus.

      I like to compare Ubuntu vs. OS X.
      Ubuntu has all the GUI tricks and a lot more then OS X. However OS X still gets praises for being an excellent UI outside the Linux Zealot range even outside the Mac Fanboy range. Why because Apple spent a lot of time, much more the most Open Source Projects dedicate to. For using the right element to portrait the right job.
      Now Firefox is going to use Ribbons. Ill wait until I see if before I pass judgement.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    6. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by danbert8 · · Score: 5, Informative
      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    7. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by sopssa · · Score: 5, Insightful

      However Ribbon's "contextual" system is horrible to user too. People get used to where things are, even more so with computers. That is why static, normal menus and buttons are good. When the system is trying to contextually offer the "best" options to user, in seemingly random places it thinks are most relevant, they just get confused.

      I use browser and I I've learned where things are. I know better myself what I'm looking for than some algorithm that will just mix things up.

    8. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by raju1kabir · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem I have with the ribbon, and the reason I'll download an add-on to replace the menus in Firefox or just switch to Safari, is that it's a disorganized mess, with everything getting roughly the same amount of visual play. Worse still, some things get more play just because they take more space to show.

      With the menu, some things may be buried a few levels deep, but at least it's highly organised and I can quickly figure out where to find things using common sense. In the long run this works out much better for me. Maybe it's different for users who are just encountering a computer for the first time or something.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    9. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by avandesande · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not to mention that once you have learned menus in one app you can apply much of that to the next.

      Computers are complicated because they are complicated.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    10. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by badasscat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually the ribbon style is not built for eye candy but rather for usability. The problem with menu style systems is that it is not intuitive. There is resistance to the change because of 'menus are the way we are used to doing things' not necessarily the way things should be done.

      The way things "should be done" is the way people want them to be done and are used to them being done.

      All this "intuitive" BS is nonsense. What is "intuitive" about looking at a screen and picking something off a "ribbon" at the top of a bar over a bunch of text and images? There's nothing in human instinctual behavior that would guide that. We know to do something like that because we have learned how to do it.

      And there is just no reason to have to learn a new system when we have all already learned how to use menus. I still can't get anything done beyond the most basic tasks in Word because of the stupid ribbon, and I've basically given up on the whole app because of it. I used to use it for everything, now I use it as a last resort - I use Wordpad for most other things that I can't use Notepad for. (My version of Wordpad still has menus; I didn't realize there was a version with the ribbon. Now I know to avoid it.)

      You know what I wish people would stop doing? Assuming I'm too dumb to use menus, but smart enough to learn a whole new system that I've never seen before. And I'm sure a lot of other people feel the same way.

    11. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by buswolley · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exactly. We need consistency for usability. When something shows up inone spot, we need it to be in that spot the next time we look for it. For things used a lot, it makes sense to have a quick launch icon for one click access, and that is good enough.

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    12. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by avandesande · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bottom line is that I hate having tools move around when I use them

      In fact when I develop applications now I disable contextually useless items but not hide them so the user does not waste time looking for a tool they shouldn't be using.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    13. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by niiler · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I know the argument, but with people going with wide-screen laptops and the like, screen real-estate is at a premium, especially at the top of the screen. The menu-bar is small and compact, The ribbon is not. Even if the ribbon goes on the left or the right, it still eats up pixels. I much prefer right clicking for context, but that's just me.

    14. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by keithius · · Score: 4, Informative

      The link you are probably looking for is this one:

      http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/archive/2006/11/10/the-office-2007-ui-bible.aspx

      It's a link to Jensen Harris's Office 2007 blog, where he collects all the articles he wrote about the Office 2007 UI (the "ribbon"), explains WHY it is the way it is, provides (IMHO) rather insightful comparisons against the old menu & toolbar paradigm, and generally does a good job of explaining why they chose the ribbon over the "status quo" of toolbars and menus.

      That said, a ribbon-based UI is not always the answer - like toolbars and menus, it can be abused by people who don't think UI design through carefully enough, but it is a clever and intuitive answer to "option overload."

      --
      "Programming is the fine art of making a machine that has absolutely no intelligence act as though it does."
    15. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by Jugalator · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually the ribbon style is not built for eye candy but rather for usability.

      True, since large menu hierarchies like those found in Office 2003 may end up as cumbersome and hard to find what you're looking for.

      But simple applications like Firefox do not actually suffer from this problem, and I think MS only did this in Windows 7 for Paint and WordPad to showcase their new Ribbon API in Windows 7, much like WordPad was earlier written in MFC to exemplify the MFC C++ library on MSDN.

      Stupid, stupid, stupid, IMHO. :-(

      Guess why MS isn't releasing the bulk of their apps using the Ribbon UI?

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    16. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by keithius · · Score: 5, Informative

      There is no "algorithm" in the ribbon, unlike in earlier (menu driven!) versions of Office.

      Unlike the menus in, say, Office XP or Office 2003, where some items were "hidden" until you used them, in the ribbon EVERYTHING is there. It doesn't try to "adapt" to you. Sure, you have to re-learn where a lot of stuff is, but that was often the case before the ribbon came out as well (because more features kept getting squeezed into a menu-driven UI that just wasn't made for a program with that many options).

      The only thing that changes in the ribbon are some contextual tabs that show up at the end, e.g., when you have selected a picture or a table. These tabs are meaningless normally, so they are hidden. But they don't re-arrange themselves based on your usage patterns - they are static and don't change.

      --
      "Programming is the fine art of making a machine that has absolutely no intelligence act as though it does."
    17. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Actually the ribbon style is not built for eye candy but rather for usability.

      This is actually a point of contention among usability engineers.

      The problem with menu style systems is that it is not intuitive.

      Intuitive is a rather subjective term. Rather the question is how learnable it is and how functional.

      There is resistance to the change because of 'menus are the way we are used to doing things' not necessarily the way things should be done.

      The learning curve for new interfaces can be problematic. Any change will meet some resistance. MS's ribbon will probably meets more than most because of vocal minorities and because the coupled it with a switch that temporarily eliminated some features. So power users of Word were frustrated partly by a new interface but also because they assumed they could perform a task and the interface was preventing them, when in truth the task had become impossible coinciding with the new interface.

      Putting features in front of the user rather than 3 to 4 deep in a menu system is far more intuitive.

      The problem is if the needed feature is in front of the user and determining what is needed where. If a menu system is more than three levels deep, you've failed as a UI designer.

      In fact I think the office ribbon layout is due to a massive amount of consumer research on Microsoft's Behalf.

      The consensus I've seen seems to be that it is based off of the the U of W's Decision-Theoretic UI project, but where MS was unable to get it to work properly so they scrapped the fundamental adaptive nature and just kept the UI style. The underlying concept resulted in mixed results for UI designers in the first place, so maybe that isn't too terrible and the design of the elements they copied were at least sensible and obeyed fundamental principals of UI design.

      MS does not seem to have published their usability testing (if they did it and followed the results which is always a question with MS) but have published PR pieces claiming that user studies show improved usability; of course not publishing that underlying study either. Scholarly works to date seem to contradict their claims, but some of those were a little less than methodical in implementation. I think MS managed to piss a lot of people off and introduce a new UI scheme which is questionable but not terrible in and of itself.

    18. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Funny

      Its the most assinine user-unfriendly POS I have seen since vi.

      So your worst nightmare is that Microsoft will one day introduce MS Linux with, say, ribbon-enabled MS Vi 2012?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    19. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by onemorechip · · Score: 5, Funny

      Let's hope they have!

      --
      But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
    20. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by spun · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The kind of feedback you are talking about is useful for tweaking a UI, not for coming up with a novel UI concept to begin with. The kind of 'advanced research' I'm talking about is the sort of stuff that came up with the concepts in the first place. You may want to read some of Brenda Laurel's publications on human/computer interaction, that was the stuff that got bastardized into Bob and Clippy. The idea for the ribbon interface also came out of university research, not Microsoft's labs.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    21. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by CarpetShark · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Thankfully, I'm sure there will be a theme or add-on to fix this GUI abortion.

      Yes. I imagine it'll be called EpiphanyForWindows, WebkitFF3Theme, FirefoxLite, or something similar. Chances are though, that the Firefox project itself will just plough ahead with this stupid idea, and ignore everyone who disagrees. Any project that fixes it is likely to be a third-party effort.

      Whatever. I'm just waiting for a stable version of Chrome that has adblock support.

    22. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by stjobe · · Score: 4, Informative

      There already exists one: http://vimperator.org/trac/wiki/Vimperator

      --
      "Total destruction the only solution" - Bob Marley
    23. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by jandrese · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'm confused about this point, and it has come up several times now. Menus are grouped logically based on the actions as well, that is not unique to ribbon. In fact that's the whole point of a menu, to keep stuff organized and easy to find.

      The thing that drives me nuts about Office 2007's menu is that I'll use a function on something, then move to a different part of the document and discover that the function I just used is gone, even though it would still be valid. Then I'm forced to flip through the various ribbon tabs to find the function on a different ribbon that looks different and has slightly different options (oh, this one has blue and grey instead of blue and pink for some reason). It drives me nuts. I'm forever hunting around on the stupid ribbon for wherever the function I want wandered off to.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    24. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by smurphmeister · · Score: 5, Funny

      Who? Who doesn't want to use the ribbon?

    25. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by b4dc0d3r · · Score: 5, Funny

      Too bad, everyone knows there is no alternative, only XUL.

    26. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by Volante3192 · · Score: 5, Funny

      table@diningroom:~ $ mv salt seat1 seat3
      Expected magic word not found.
      table@diningroom:~ $

    27. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by Bovarchist · · Score: 5, Informative

      The screenshot in TFA would seem to indicate that what they are calling a "ribbon" is simply the same interface that Chrome and Safari are already using.

      --
      Hell is other people's code.
    28. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by je+ne+sais+quoi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Whatever the source of the data that they used, the result is something that the majority of advanced excel users hate and about 80% dislike. For intermediate users, about 40% hate it and 60% dislike it. Basically, people who know how to use excel already can't stand this ribbon, so MS has just royally pissed off some of their best customers perhaps to the benefit of those who don't use it so often. I have seen more people migrate to linux on their laptops due to this single "feature" than anything else. The ribbon is an even more than the problems with vista, although it is more of a straw that broke the camel's back sort of thing.

      I already dislike the new gui for firefox on the mac (why in the world does the back button need to be so big?), and use safari because of it, but on linux I use FF all the time. I guess I'm going to sit back and hope that midori is released soon, or use konqueror.

      --
      Gentlemen! You can't fight in here, this is the war room!
    29. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by neokushan · · Score: 5, Informative

      Hurray for people not reading TFA:

      Though it will be turned on by default for Windows 7 and Vista users, they will be able to toggle between the old and new interface by holding the Alt key.

      --
      +1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
    30. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by spun · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hah! True, but the theory behind Bob and Clippy is pretty advanced. It came from Brenda Laurel's analysis of human/computer interaction. Not from Melinda French's... sorry, my mind is simply refusing to imagine Bill Gates in a sexual situation.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    31. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by Ghostworks · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Another important thing to remember that menus hide unused and rarely-used features. In most modern software that's actually a pretty good thing, as very few people need or want to leverage every single feature of an application in one session. It makes it harder to discover those features, but once you learn where they are the first time around, it's a solved problem. By presenting the user with large blocks of mostly unwanted toolbars, the ribbon scheme steals valuable vertical space without offering any usability savings over the initial discovery. You still have to switch between ribbon states to find half the features you want, and select from drop-down lists of icons insted of drop-down menus of options.

      This will mesh better with Microsoft's vision of a modern application, for what that's worth. It might make some features easier to discover (I know people who are still surprised to learn about Firefox's keywords feature). Even so, I doubt it will be more popular than the current design, lead to significant changes in the way people use Firefox's features, or be worth the loss of valuable vertical real-estate. The only good thing I can say about it is that most people don't need to use menus in Firefox as it is, and the ribbon can probably be hidden like the URL bar, menu bar, and toolbars can already be hidden.

    32. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by xaxa · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The way things "should be done" is the way people want them to be done and are used to them being done. Bull....to an extent. Intuitive means it behaves in a way that you can reason out, that is natural. CLIs for instance are not intuitive, there is no real world example of CLI

      The other reply has mentioned natural language.

      I read a study where some old people were taught how to use a computer (some Linux distro) using the CLI for most tasks. Most of them quickly understood the give command/get response paradigm, one said it was like talking to a child -- you had to be precise and specific, and exactly what you asked for would be done.

      Think remote controls, all buttons are in front of you, at best there is an +10 on the remote.

      The meanings of the buttons changes according to what's on the screen. My grandma doesn't like her new TV, it has "too many buttons". This isn't an interface we should replicate.

      Or consider a more organic approach, at a grocery store you dont have to push fruit out of the way to get to the vegetables to get to the potatoes. You go to the produce isle and head for the potatoes right in front of you.

      File -> Save
      Produce -> Potatoes

      Looks like a menu to me. (Salads -> Potato, on a dinner menu -- that's why it's called a menu!)

      having them memorize a menu system is not useful.

      You don't need to memorise a menu system, that's the whole point. The options you have are grouped according to their function, if you want to change the text colour try the "Formatting" menu, etc.

      With a toolbar the minimum is to learn what each picture means, and this is significant. Grouping the icons is essentially making menus without text.

    33. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by raju1kabir · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't think this is because of organization, I think it is because of all the rote learning you've done. You aren't reading & reacting to the menu bar you "just know" where to go because you've done it a million times.

      Actually I specifically meant to refer to situations where I don't know how to perform the task in question. With the menu bar I can quickly figure it out. With the ribbon I am flipping things in and out, trying to find something that seems relevant, wasting vast amounts of time waiting for tooltips to appear on undecipherable icons.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    34. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by Stele · · Score: 5, Funny

      There is no Dana, only XUL.

    35. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by Hangtime · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You sound like a Microsoft developer I curse everyday. For those who actually have to be productive ie those of us in Finance Excel 2003 works great. Everyone knows where everything is and has modified the menus and buttons to make them more productive. Of course, the Ribbon is not for the power user its for the user who has no idea what they want thus its geared towards the lowest common demoninator ie the secretary or grandma. Anytime I have to drop into 2007 I lose 30 - 40% of my productivity because things that were one or two clicks away you have to first find then you are 4 - 5 clicks. Ribbon is just another word for unproductive mess.

    36. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by commodore64_love · · Score: 5, Funny

      >>>gt wth th txtng genrtn. & no i wnt gt off yr lwn

      Shakespeare is dat u? I lovd ur ply. "O Romeo, denie thy Fathr: Vnto the white vpturned wondring eyes; Of mortalls that fall backe, When he bestrides the lazie puffing Cloudes, And sailes vpon the bosome of the ayre."

      Brllint!

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    37. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by msclrhd · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yes. And TFA is taken initially from https://wiki.mozilla.org/Firefox/Sprints/Windows_Theme_Revamp/Direction_and_Feedback, which is discussing the direction of *applications* written for Vista and Windows 7 that don't use the menubar, but use a contextual strip (Windows Explorer) or Office Ribbon (Paint and Wordpad). That paragraph is about the rationale for not showing the menubar on Vista and later in Firefox, not on adding a ribbon to Firefox (it is under a Hiding of the Menubar section).

      It seems as though a blogger misread this paragraph, and everyone on the interweb has been taking this as fact, without actually RTFOA (Reading The Friendly Original Article).

      From the pcpro article referenced in the /. summary:

      "Starting with Vista, and continuing with Windows 7, the menu bar is going away," notes Mozilla in its plans for revamping the Firefox user interface. "[It will] be replaced with things like the Windows Explorer contextual strip, or the Office Ribbon, [which is] now in Paint and WordPad, too."

      From the Mozilla page:

      "Starting with Vista, and continuing with Windows 7, the menubar is going away. To be replaced with things like the Windows Explorer contextual strip, or the Office Ribbon(now in Paint and Wordpad too). Many apps still retain the menubar as an option to be pinned or to be shown briefly by holding the Alt key."

      Note that here they are talking about Vista and Windows 7, not Firefox (and also note the "Many apps ..." bit in the last sentence).

    38. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It can't be any worse than an inappropriate use of monospaced font on a web site.

    39. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by Jay+L · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And the third funny thing is that there's simply no way any "advanced Excel user" would, or COULD switch to Linux, because OOo can't do as much as Excel can.

    40. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by N1AK · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've been using office for years, and in my current role have to use excel excessively. To guestimate, I would say 60% of my time is spent working in that program. I would hate to have to give up 2007 and the ribbon.

      Anyone who has been using Excel 2007 for months and estimates their productivity has taken a sizeable drop isn't a advanced or intermediate user. I can respect the view that 2007 is less intuitive (even though I disagree) but it is plain bollocks to say it is slower once you know how to use it (and an advanced user is capable of learning new methods ffs).

      When I hear morons talk about muscle memory in Excel I know they don't understand what an advanced user is. Did ANY advanced user actually grab the mouse and click on a menu option rather than using one of the numerous keyboard shortcuts?

    41. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by Jay+L · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The ribbon makes finding more obscure things a very very slow process, with all these ribbon change, new menu open things going on, compared to simply reading all the menu options.

      Apparently Microsoft thinks otherwise - and they have hard data from the actual clickstream of Excel users. The whole reason they introduced the ribbon (and got rid of the awful UI "improvements" of Office XP and 2003) was that (a) other than the top 10 commands, everyone uses a different subset of Office functionality, and (b) the top 10 feature requests were already in Office. Everyone thinks Office is bloated, but just like pork-barrel politics, everyone means something different by "bloat".

      Office had already grown way past the point where you could discover a feature by reading all the menus; that's why they tried Personalized Menus and Task Panes and all that. According to Microsoft's data, the ribbon is more discoverable than the old UI - though obviously it requires relearning, and thus rediscovering a bunch of functions all at once.

      That said, Firefox clearly doesn't have the massive command vocabulary of Office, and I can't imagine there are any Firefox features that were too hard to find via menus. This seems more like copycatting.

    42. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by fredrik70 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But they DID want those features!. MS realised users didn't find the functionality when they asked for functionality that was already in Office since long ago. The Ribbon was their take on trying to solve that, and personally I think they are on the right track,

      Anyway, this whole discussion seems bit unneccessary since I cannot find anywhere on mozilla.org where they say they will use the ribbon, they do however give some examples of how they think future firefox will look and whgile it's not the ribbon, it quite pretty, although one can see they looked quite a lot at Chrome and ie 7/8:

      https://wiki.mozilla.org/Firefox/Sprints/Windows_Theme_Revamp/Direction_and_Feedback

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
    43. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by jaavaaguru · · Score: 5, Funny

      table@diningroom:~ $ sudo mv salt seat1 seat3
      Salt move successful.
      table@diningroom:~ $

    44. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by ClosedSource · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I guess it depends on the definition of "advanced user". If it means "most efficient", you're right. If it means a user that creates complex spreadsheets, who knows?

    45. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by Miamicanes · · Score: 4, Interesting

      > (Heck, Windows has pretty much _always_ had one of the most responsive UIs.)

      (grabs paper towel to wipe Diet Mountain Dew from the display... AFTER blowing as much as possible from nose once the coughing stopped)

      Windows has always had one of the easiest-to-hang UIs (with the possible exception of pre-OSX MacOS and PalmOS) of any modern OS, thanks to Microsoft's retarded architectural philosophy of putting the application in charge of managing its own UI effects and redrawing itself on demand. It's why a badly-written Win32 app can't be minimized, usually can't have its window moved, might swallow its mouse pointer, and needs ctrl-alt-delete to be involuntarily killed. It allows the consequences of that braindamaged app to spread beyond the application itself, and affect the working of every OTHER running application, too.

      It's why a 20+ year old Amiga running at 7.16MHz had a UI that was, in many ways, more responsive than Windows running on a 3GHz quadcore i7. Intuition (the Amiga's window manager) was completely indifferent to the state of running applications. If you clicked a close gadget, it XOR'ed the nanosecond you clicked the button, and returned to normal the moment you released it. The app itself might have crashed beyond repair 20 minutes earlier, and the gesture might achieve nothing besides the visual indication of a close-gadget click, but at least there was zero doubt in your mind that the click was made. If you saw the colors invert, and the app didn't close, you knew INSTANTLY it was hopeless, and just cycled the power. There was no "did Windows see my mouse click?" ambiguity.

      Ditto, for window moves. If an app died a horrible death and froze, you could still move the window, and its contents obediently moved right along with it. The hardware didn't care... bitmap bits were bitmap bits. You could cover and uncover the window, and it looked exactly like it did before. Unlike Windows, Intuition genuinely didn't *care* whether the app was still working. It did its thing, and got out of the way. Compare that to Vista, XP, and just about everything since the invention of Active Desktop... where you might not even be able to show the Start menu for ~45 seconds if something in a web page being requested by FIREFOX (an app completely unrelated to Windows) or IE causes a fractured DNS lookup to hang Explorer's stupid, brain-damaged single-threaded name resolver that gets used for everything from DNS lookups to figuring out the meaning of "C:\" It's not *quite* as bad under SMP as it used to be with a single core/CPU... but it still happens, and it's still incredibly annoying when it does.

    46. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by R.Mo_Robert · · Score: 5, Informative

      Good thing that the ribbon takes up the exact same amount of space as the old toolbars and menu did, then: http://blogs.msdn.com/jensenh/archive/2006/04/17/577485.aspx

      The document viewing area by default in Word 97 and Word 2007 is literally the exact same, except 2007 actually gives you slightly more space horizontally. PowerPoint is the exact same. The only significat difference is that you do lose a row with Excel, but as someone who works with Excel on a daily basis, I'd gladly take the ribbon over the menu any day. Additionally, you can collapse the ribbon (double-click a tab or hit Ctrl+F1) to save space. I'd guess this would save at least as much space as collapsing the old two-row Word toolbar into one, if not more.

      Space, my friend, is not an issue. (Not to mention that Mozilla isn't really going to the "ribbon," anyway, but that's another story.)

      --
      R.Mo
    47. Re:Eyecandy in cost of usability by complete+loony · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ew, that's one of the worst things I found about the UI of IE7. If you accidentally touch the alt key, or you start to press an alt-something keyboard shortcut and change your mind, *everything* jumps around as the menubar jumps into existence.

      If you want a menu bar to become visible, put it in front of something else that you aren't going to use at the same time. Making the whole UI of the application jump around and re-render is really annoying.

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
  2. How time flies by ArhcAngel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I had no idea it was April already.

    --
    "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
  3. Please, don't do it. by alain_delon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Please, don't.

  4. why??? by revlayle · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The point of the ribbon was to consolidate many complicated context sensitive (in this case i mean, menu items disable and enable based on current document context) menu items/tasks into a more readily available context sensitive toolbar (making a menu bar obsolete).

    However, a web browser doesn't need that many context sensitive too bar elements. Chrome, Safari and even IE 8 already has a very simplified and usable tool bar (with one or two drop down menus for more detailed options - hardly requiring a ribbon).

    i just don't really get this...

    1. Re:why??? by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      See, I get it for Microsoft Office. Its alot user intuitive for users to find the save and print and formating buttons with the ribbon system they've got set up. Good for that.

      But seriously, when was the last time I used the menu bar in any browser? I enter a URL... I browse... I close it when I'm done...

      I hate clutter at the top of the sceen, eating up valuable viewing space for bigger pictures and such. I was upset when IE snuck a Search Toolbar in there without me really asking - since its automatically set to search if the URL doesn't resolve to anything... But whatever, removed it and got over it.

      Now they want to take that less than an inch menu bar and make it take up 2 inches of my screen so that I can NEVER use it. Besides the fact that I never find a need to go in there, everything will be relayed out and I probably won't be able to find what I'm looking for when I do need to.

  5. In Related News... by swanzilla · · Score: 5, Funny

    Firefox To Replace Menus With Office Ribbon

    Many To Replace Firefox With Opera

  6. Re:Mac. by Red+Flayer · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dear Timothy,

    I use a Mac. Menu bars are built into the system. It also has "Aqua" rendering, not the knockoff "Aero".

    Love,
    TheMCP

    Dear TheMCP,

    I use a PET2001. There are no menus. It has no graphical rendering. I can't even get Lynx to run on it.

    This letter has as much to do with the discussion as yours does. Please take your fellatious Mac worship elsewhere.

    Love,
    Red Flayer

    --
    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  7. Re:Repeat after me, by coolsnowmen · · Score: 4, Informative

    It is an option.

    "Though it will be turned on by default for Windows 7 and Vista users, they will be able to toggle between the old and new interface by holding the Alt key."

  8. I would generally agree with that research. by brennanw · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I fully expected to hate that damn ribbon, but the reluctant truth is that I find the more I use it the more generally useful it becomes -- especially for exposing semi-obscure but useful Microsoft Word features (like creating cross references). Still, there's a catch. When it doesn't work it falls flat on its face and you spend the next three hours trying to figure out how to do something that should only have taken 5 minutes.

    --
    Eviscerati.Org: All Hail the Eviscerati
  9. the haters won't notice, but... by spyrochaete · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The screenshot in TFA looks nothing like the Office ribbon. The purpose of the ribbon is to make apparent the options the are usually buried within expanding hierarchical menus. In the screenshot it looks to me like they just replaced pulldown menus with pulldown buttons.

    I love the Office ribbon and would be very happy to see this standard propagate into more user interfaces. I'd love to see it implemented in Firefox, but I see no such thing here.

  10. Re:How about an original thought? by koiransuklaa · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'll wait until the obvious font problem is fixed.

  11. What contexts are there? by sherriw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The context sensitive ribbon... what 'contexts' are there exactly? I'm viewing a webpage or.... viewing a webpage. That's it! It's not like Word where I might be editing text or drawing a table, or manipulating an inserted image.

    Most of FF's menus are related to the configuration of the system. And configuration of the addons. This could be a little better organized but it's certianly not broken or a priority for redesign.

    Imagine trying to tell your grandma over the phone how to set an option: "Click on Tools, then click Internet Options"... oh wait... there's no more menu. "Click on the icon that kind of looks like a toolbox with a wand over it... er".

  12. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by DJRumpy · · Score: 5, Informative

    I can't agree more. I had the pleasure(?) of helping a friend take his basic "Office 2007" computer class for college. Fortunately our company didn't go to Office 2007 so it was my first experience with it. It has to be one of the most unintuitive interfaces that MS has pushed out in years.

    The tabs try to present too much information in a limited space. I felt like I was playing those old Monkey Island pixel hunt games. I found it totally unnecessary to have a picture for every function I was trying to perform when simple functions like FILE, EDIT, and VIEW would serve so much easier. We ended spending more time just trying to FIND the sub tab info than we did learning about new functionality. It's almost like they did it just to make Office look 'different' but failed to realize they weren't really innovating anything. They were just putting pictures in place of easy to read text, and adding more 'clutter' in places where it wasn't needed.

  13. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by danbert8 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually, on a modern car, with the exception of park and lower gears (which most people STILL don't understand), on an automatic transmission, they don't have control over the shifting anyway. He would probably appreciate the power steering and brakes as well. The driving interface is quite possibly the best user interface I know of, because the basic design hasn't changed since the days of the horseless carriage.

    To continue with your car analogy, the switch to the ribbon is like switching a car to a joystick... It might be more intuitive for younger people (who play too much Xbox), but it isn't necessarily the best tool for the job.

    --
    Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
  14. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by commodore64_love · · Score: 4, Insightful

    >>>people are bitching about Microsoft not maintaining backards compatibility...

    Well I've tried and failed multiple times to make Wing Commander operate on Microsoft and failed spectacularly...... but never mind that. - Improvement is only an improvement if the overall usage is improved. Yeah I know you're probably thinking "No shit sherlock", but that basic idea is something many people overlook.

    The current interface presents a nice CLEAN list of commands, which can be quickly and easily scanned. The new ribbon interface presents a confusing mess of pictures and words that make a "quick scan" very difficult. It's the computer equivalent of tacking an organized library, and just randomly tossing books everywhere. Yes the books might be neatly arranged, but they are still random to the eye, and finding the book you want becomes very difficult.

    Put the books/menu commands back in a nice, serial order so the human eye can scan and find what it's looking for.

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
  15. Look and Feel has become the OS by slack_justyb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Apple has a look and feel that screams Apple. Most vendors comply with the look and feel. That Aqua, gray and blue like look.

    GNOME has a HIG that they really would love for everyone to follow. You're not forced to but, you can almost spot the applications that don't follow the GNOME HIG. That makes up a lot of the look and feel, add Ubuntu's wonderful brownish / orange; Fedora's blueish; or SuSE's green everywhere and you have a look and feel that screams the distro's GNOME.

    Microsoft has the Aero glass and wonderful (*snicker*) ribbon. Microsoft is slowly getting everyone on the glass and ribbon theme. There is no absolute rule that you must use glass and ribbon styles on your Microsoft application, but people notice when it doesn't match up. It gives Microsoft that Post-XP look and feel.

    In the end, operating systems are trying to make a look that defines them, that people can easily recognize. Much like Google has their own look and feel of blue and flat that they've got going on. People identify readily with a unique look and feel and that is, in a nutshell, cheap advertising. There is nothing wrong with developers not going along with the look and feel an OS uses, Winamp comes to mind as a big one, but it automatically points out that the user is using something different, something not part of the OS; and if the OS is using a really slick look and feel with all kinds of neat effects, not going with the OS look and feel makes you look dated, or posing (if you're trying to do your own slick look and feel effects.)

    For 90% of us here on Slashdot, this is all just a bunch of useless eye candy. However, it's a real important factor for the other whatever percentage of the general population who just buy into marketing hype.

    Chrome looks out of place on Windows sans the glass effect. It looks like a giant blue rubber browser. However, that doesn't mean that it is silly, just looks exactly not like a Windows Vista/7 application. We can debate the merits of looking like a Windows application till the cows come home, point being it looks out of place.

    Whatever your take is on the ribbon UI, I won't argue you there, but that's where Microsoft looks like they're heading for general UI, just like Mac OS X puts the menu bar at the top of the screen. It's just part of that look and feel and companies are very geared to have a distinct look and feel so that people can instantly recognize that the product in use.

    So are we going to toss stones at Mozilla for actually going the with the look and feel of a Windows program, when they try to achieve the same on Mac OS X and Linux? I think the better answer for all the people who are heading down to the rock quarry is: If you do not like the glass/ribbon look and feel, maybe you should change to an OS that matches the way you want it to look?

    I can almost hear the angry replies, but I will say this in my defense. The look, feel, and usability of a given OS is a marketable thing. I ditched Windows when I saw what they were going to do with Windows post-3.11. I couldn't stand it, but I understood that this was the way Microsoft was going (start buttons, browser like file navigation, etc...) I can not fight a war with a company that is trying to market stuff. So, I switched to an OS where I could dictate how things are going to work, Linux. I've not looked back since.

    We just need to understand that Mozilla is bringing their application to look like a Microsoft application, just like they did with the Linux version of Firefox when they added GTK+ integration. Just like they are trying to do with making Firefox look like a Mac OS X program. So, come on, if you don't like the direction MS is taking with their look and feel, stop waiting for more applications to break ties with the Microsoft look and feel. Instead, switch over to an OS that matches what you want. It's not that hard really, and after a few weeks, you won't notice the difference. Let's make peace, not cast stones.

  16. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by VGPowerlord · · Score: 4, Informative

    No. People like what they are used to, but there is no automatic connection between time and usability. My father was brought up with a currency here in the UK that until 1971 was a total headfuck. You should have seen the howls of pain from those who tried to make out that base 10 was utterly confusing.

    How on earth you can equate longevity with usability is utterly beyond me.

    For an even more recent example, look at the United States and its reasons for not switching to the (clearly superior) metric system.

    (Note: I'm a US citizen)

    --
    GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
  17. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by DrLang21 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My biggest problem with the system is the strict use of pictorial representations of functions. I don't know what "Properties" or "Insert" or "Cross Reference" is supposed to look like. Nor would anyone be able to describe to me how to find them since they would be describing a tiny icon picture which I would then have to interpret instead of using a single word explanatory statement.

    --
    I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
  18. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by Evil+Shabazz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You are all complaining about a complete non-issue. But this is /., so that's to be expected. The ribbon actually IS a much better menu system once you get used to it. All the normal things that most users generally use are pretty easy to find, and many of the mid-level and intermediate things they weren't already aware of are presented more easily. And, the shortcut keys for advanced users weren't changed for the most part.

    Most people who actually give the ribbon a chance get used to it in about 2 weeks - much better than most software changes as big as moving to the ribbon. It's just the people railing against it for the sake of railing against change who can't handle it.

    Get over it. Not all change not initiated by YOU is bad.

    --
    Down with the career politician! SUPPORT TERM LIMITS
  19. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by Fallen+Seraph · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If he had trouble with it, regardless of his previous experience, then it's because it's not intuitive! Where intuition means the ability to use the product without reading manuals, looking up online help, etc.

    I'm sorry, but you're quite wrong here. Previously used conventions are a major part of UI design, but abandoning old conventions for better ones is both a major and necessary risk at times. By your definition, how intuitive a system is depends entirely on the person using it, and the results of testing would have no objective value. The fact is that old Office menus were complete garbage, and we only liked them because we'd been using them for the better part of almost 2 decades.

    I remember my heuristics professor once telling us how she was at CES one year and there was this black device at one of the booths. It just looked like a box, and had no buttons or anything, and she stood there for a while trying to figure out how to turn it on. It never occurred to her to just touch it. When she did, it immediately lit up and exposed interactive elements on it's surface.

    Something being intuitive is not what you describe it to be. It is the ability of a system to be learned and adapted to quickly. Prior knowledge of other systems can either help or hinder this scenario, but the baseline is from the perspective of one who's never interacted with this sort of technology before. If you are accustomed to other systems for the same task, but which function differently, this will be an obvious hindrance as your mind subconsciously begins looking for the same conventions, which are notably lacking. The real measure of its worth is how long it takes to relearn how to use the new system.

    I was personally hesitant to try it as well, and put it off for about two years, but found it surprisingly comfortable to use when I finally capitulated. Additionally, it's very obvious that the ribbon's real purpose is actually to provide a common interface for legacy, and potential future touch screen displays, with its use of large buttons and more area.

  20. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by digitig · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Haven't we had that argument a couple of times here already? Anyway : the reason you had trouble with it is not because it isn't intuitive, it's because you're very fluent with and accustomed to the old UI.

    Don't think so, it violates quite a few basic rules of UI design. I know there are issues with the old 7+/-2 rule, but a higgledy-piggledy hodgepodge of non-intuitive icons is hard to search, it takes more screen real-estate than necessary, and is hostile to touch typists who don't want to have to keep moving their hand from keyboard to mouse and back (Alt-F S has become Alt H F D F -- double the keystrokes).

    --
    Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
  21. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Except that even once you're used to it, it still takes up a HUGE chunk (relatively) of vertical screen real estate which you can never get back. You know, the dimension that's becoming less and less available as the OEMs beat the "widescreen" drum because they can claim the same number of inches for less pixels?

    On my install of firefox 2, I have the toolbar, menubar, *AND* address bar all stuck on the same line. It takes up 16 vertical pixels. The tab bar is another 16 pixels. This is a godsend on tiny screened devices. Yes, I may be able to hide the ribbon, but it's not very useful when it's hidden, is it? It adds another click to *everything* that simply does not need to be there. Used to be, in Word, I could cram all of the functions I use often (including "hide spelling/grammer errors") onto one toolbar. One toolbar which would fit next to the menubar on most screens. The other functions were there under the menus if I needed them. Can I do that now? (Maybe I can--if the ribbon can be reduced to ~16 or so pixels tall while still giving one-click access to functions, then maybe it's less of an abortion than I've given it credit for.)

    I can't understand why vertical screen space is treated like it's free and unlimited when really it is becoming more precious with time.

  22. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by commodore64_love · · Score: 4, Insightful

    >>>Most people who actually give the ribbon a chance get used to it in about 2 weeks -

    Wow. 2 weeks of my life wasted so I could save 1/4 second selecting my command. Yeah. Benjamin Franklin had a saying about that - "Penny wise; pound foolish," to describe people who count pennies but spend dollars recklessly.

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
  23. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by bay43270 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    <sarcasm>Yes, I'm sure that's what he meant. You have to spend 336 hours straight studying the Office ribbon before you can use it correctly.</sarcasm>

    His point (which I agree with), is that all things being equal, the ribbon is a better interface than the file menu. Of course all things are not equal. You've been practicing on that clunky "Word for Windows" file menu for 15 years. It may take you a little time to retrain yourself. People like myself, on the other hand, don't use Office regularly, and find the new interface much easier to use.

    Microsoft is taking a calculated risk to separate themselves from their competitors. I think it was a good decision.

  24. Re:Summary of /. Reaction to Proposal by glennpratt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm really surprised that the Slashdot crowd has so much trouble with the ribbon. I'm an IT consultant and across all the people I've deployed Office 2007 to, not one has had more then a handful of questions and zero complaints (at least with regard to the ribbon). Many people actively sought a budget to get 2007 after seeing someone else use it, I never pushed it on anyone. On top of that, people are using styles instead of hand formatting everything, creating locked forms and templates (and editing them later without calling me for help) and using all sorts of feature, sometimes asking me about features I had never used. I've been using it so long, it's far more jarring to try to go back then the transition ever was. Plus auto-hiding the ribbon works great on notebooks / netbooks. Of course, I don't see how it will work in a web browser, but I guess we will see.