Results tagged “UI” from Irish Violet

New Facebook UI = WIP

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A new week, a newly redesigned, widely-used and enjoyed site has confused and generally done a poor job communicating its intentions to its users. Last time, LastFM; this time, Facebook. The reaction hasn't been as visceral as the response to the LastFM changes, but just 5% of FB users have been exposed to the new layout. I predict the volume will increase.

The new profile page is set up as in a three-column format with one column reserved for ads. Get ready, more poorly targeted ad messaging to come! The search box and links to your applications have moved from the left-nav to a primary navigation bar at the very top of the page. A new subnav has tabs for Wall, Info, Photos and "Boxes" that at least one person has already commented should be renamed Apps given what you find on that tab. Since the most popular and widely used applications developed for Facebook are the Walls (Fun, Super, etc.) and photo uploads/sharing, creating quick link tabs for them makes sense. The Info tab collects personal information (professional and education history, city, groups relationship status, etc) into one area. Also, smart and intuitive. And, for the time being, Facebook does have a link for users to revert to the previous profile layout, but that link will be disabled over the next few weeks. 

The Wall is the default tab and it's your old mini-feed on steroids. I haven't figured out how to limit the number of stories shown and my attempts at changing the default settings for the length of feed items themselves haven't been saved. What's the point of letting you know I have activity on FriendFeed if the précis doesn't display? This middle column of the layout would also be the place to have my favorites applications displayed, but that does not seem to be an option. Instead, five applications get relegated to the non ad-laden tab and it's unclear how to add or change what appears there. (The order dragging feature is still in place for these five.) Where did the rest of your apps disappear? To the Boxes tab which takes you to a page of random ordering application displays. You can drag and drop them around as on the old layout within this tab and even create individual tabs for applications, but it's a buzzkill.

The ridiculous fun of Facebook is the string of charms that you add to your profile. It's a mash-up of the inside of your junior high locker, the posters up in your room, and doodles drawn on your social studies notebook. What am I listening to? What am I reading? See what a shitty Scrabble - I mean Scrabulous - player I am. Let me brag about my cat. Adding and removing apps to my profile, moving apps around my page as I grew more or less enamored of them, changing settings app by app was all easy. Now it feels more like scavenger hunt and I'm not yet convinced the prize is worth the effort.

Bring Tha Noize -- the brouhaha at LastFM

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In a previous life, I used to write a column called "Sites and Sounds" for a long-defunct web zine. The zine died before the newer generation of music sites like Pandora and LastFM came online. I like them both, though being an extremely opinionated music geek, I am constantly groaning at a recommendation one service or the other serves up to me. I'm probably breaking the Pandora algorithm somewhere along the line. And, in case you hadn't noticed, I clogged up a clean blog template with the album quilt widget from LastFM.

And speaking of clean templates, the original LastFM interface was just that. Until today. The new skin and layout of LastFM has been introduced to widespread hue and cry. On the LastFM blog and forums, it was mostly in English. On Summize/TwitterSearch, it was in many languages. So much for embracing change.

Let's all calm down people. This isn't the "ribbon" in Microsoft Office 2007 which must have single-handedly lowered productivity for Excel users by almost as large a factor as NCAA March Madness. I don't love it either on first perusal, LastFM, but I haven't figured it all out yet. Giving the option for users to default to the old layout would have been a nice touch. Charles Schwab still has the old layout for a user's account position page one click away.

A 100% reversal would obviously be too much of a knee-jerk reaction, but how should beloved brands (household names or otherwise) react to consumer rejection of the new?