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#1
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| Hey everybody. I have sort of an odd question and want to hear your input on it. The menu bar across the top of our Mac desktops has become a trademark of the Mac OS. It adheres to Fitts law of interface design and provides us an easy place to always access the menus in our apps, but would the Mac still be "the Mac" without it? One wonderful feature that a single, universal, application menu bar offers is the freedom of not having the menu bar trapped within an applicaiton/document window. This in turn allows us to have several document windows open within one app without having to be confined to a single application window, such as in Windows, Linux, and the majority of *nix. However, another alternative to the single, universal, application menu bar across the top of the desktop is the single, floating, movable, vertical menu that the NEXTSTEP OS used. This style of system wide menu provides many of the same features that us Mac users have grown to love, including the one I mentioned above. It also provides some additional features that we don't have, such as being detachable from the top edge of the screen, movable (even across multiple monitors), and customizable (allowing for user-defined "tear-away" sub-menus.) So again I ask, would the Mac still be "the Mac" without the menu bar across the top? If one of Apple's "Top Secret" Leopard features was a redesigned Finder with a new and improved NEXTSTEP style menu system, would the Mac OS have ceased to be the Mac? Would you still use the Mac? Let me know what you think. Thanks, Joe |
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#2
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| If it worked well, or as good as the current menu bar then there would be absolutly no reason for me to go to windows. I guess i would start to question the path apple are taking with their OS, but from what i saw in the Leopard demo, im fairly impressed with the way OSX is going I dont think there would any good reason to change the menu in any way. |
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#3
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| I really consider the menu bar one of the defining characteristics of the Mac OS. It wouldn't be the Mac without it unless its replacement provided nearly identical functionality. I think that the only reason any other OS uses anything else is because Apple has it patented. Window-based menus are a crime against humanity and make Fitt cry. The NeXT-style toolbar had its advantages, but it was too big, and I believe the cons outweighed the pros in comparison to the Mac menu bar. It was really more like the Dock than the menu bar (in fact, that's where the Dock came from). The truth is, the only logical places for menu bars are at the very top or very bottom of the screen. Why? Well, floating menus have the same weaknesses as Window-based menus, and a vertically-oriented bar means you need to rely on icons rather than text, and either way it'll be too big (vertically-oriented text is an idea so ill-conceived that I'm surprised it's not in Windows ). The Mac-style menu bar is very compact, and could easily be made even smaller without greatly sacrificing usability if Apple felt the need.The tear-away feature of the NeXT bar is not foreign to the Macintosh. You don't see it very often anymore in OS X (which is a pity, if you ask me), but in the old days, tear-away menus were somewhat common. HyperCard, for instance, had its tools in the menu bar, and you could tear it off to make a floating palette. In OS 8 and 9, you could also tear off the application menu to get the application floater (although strictly speaking, this floater was not a floating version of the menu; it was a separate app that just provided the same functionality). Improving the menu bar is like improving the wheel; you can enhance it with tires and the like, but it's so natural that any fundamental change would be silly. Of course, it's always possible somebody will come up with something better, but personally, I doubt we'll see it until the GUI as we know it is dead. Just like we'll keep using wheels until we put anti-gravity pads on everything. ![]() |
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#4
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| I think that without the static menubar at the top of the screen Mac OS would lose a bit of its personal identity. It's handy to know that no matter what you're doing the menu is in the same place, rather than at the top of an individual window. I would never want this to change.
__________________ 15" MacBook Pro: 2.33GHz Core 2 Duo / 2GB RAM / 120GB / Superdrive / Mac OS 10.5 9A581 Leopard |
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#5
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| I love that comparison. You're right, to eliminate a top-fitting menu bar would be to remove the wheel from the tire, thus majorly hindering usability except in the case of a completely redesigned GUI. I doubt we're going to see anything that radical in Leopard. I've voiced my dear want for a quantum shift in GUI design, I just don't think we'll get it next spring.
__________________ • 2.66GHz Mac Pro Quad Xeon • 2.2GHz Santa Rosa MacBook Pro • 2.0GHz iMac Core Duo • 8GB iPhone |
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#6
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| I like the menu bar, it makes sense. It does cause some switchers confusion at first, although it is simple enough to learn within minutes. I don't think Apple will be changing it anytime soon, and hopefully never!! |
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#7
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| Thanks everybody for your thoughts on this UI topic. I myself love interface design which is one MAJOR reason why I was drawn to the Mac in the first place. I also believe that the menu bar across the top has become iconic with the Mac and that somehow, if it were to go away, the Mac just wouldn't be the same. Now that isn't to say that Apple couldn't design something even more revolutionary, but why change something that is already extremely effecient! BTW, is there any truth that the first beta/developer release of Mac OS X (1.0) didn't have the menu bar? I thought I heard that was true but people were so outraged that Apple put it back before it went Gold Master. Now let me ask, do you think there's anything that Apple could do to improve the menu bar -- to make it more effecient, more customizable, more intelligent, etc.? I know there are several apps out there that add options, custom menus, better clocks, app switchers, and all kinds of stuff to the menu bar, but if you had to pick just one thing that Apple could improve within the exsiting menu bar, what would it be? Joe |
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#8
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| Quote:
Quote:
In short, the problem is that when a menu item is disabled, there is nothing to tell the user WHY. Apple could easily create some hooks for developers to create tooltips or something of that sort that would appear over menu items and explain what they do and why they're currently disabled. I rarely find this to be a problem, but in more complex apps, sometimes it's just not clear. I would also like an easier way to customize shortcuts. Apple provides the interface in the Keyboard & Mouse preference pane, but it's time-consuming to configure. I want to be able to change it right from the menu. Why not? The capability is already there, Apple just needs to make a better interface for it. |
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