Making Icons More Useful
Quick note to everyone attending the GNOME Boston events: After working things out with both the Foundation and school, I finally booked my tickets and I’m also going to be able to attend the summit following the hackfest.
There’s been some discussion lately on the Ubuntu Art mailing list about a new icon set. The icons themselves are spiffy, but what caught my attention is that some of the mockups went beyond the traditional icon metaphor. Take this mockup that Thorwil presented in a recent blog post:
The mockup puts aside the traditional view that folders are interesting things and of themselves and instead focuses on the contents of the folder.
How much farther can we take this? Folders that tell the user what’s inside of them? File managers with Google Maps-style zooming interfaces that let you zoom in and out on your content? Why not? Once you’re willing to abandon the “a folder icon should look like a folder” attitude then the possibilities are endless.
Now, I’m not claiming that all that will make the user’s life easier. However, there is room for improving interfaces by playing with traditional metaphors and improving them without scaring the user away.
Going to Boston
I’ve been invited to the GNOME User Experience Hackfest in Boston, and I’m going! (Thanks to the GNOME foundation who offered to cover the expenses.)
One of the main topics of the hackfest is collaboration throughout the desktop. Universal Applets 0.1 should be out by the time that the hackfest begins, so it’ll be a good opportunity to get some feedback and share ideas with the rest of the community.
Anyway, thank you again to the GNOME foundation for making this possible! I’ll see some of you in Boston!




20 year old