Windows 10 Mail application is a curious creature. It’s clearly designed primarily for tablet touch experience, but I am giving it a try on my desktop because there is a dearth of modern desktop mail clients. As a desktop application, Mail has numerous UX failings. Perhaps the biggest is the absence of multi-select support for messages. This makes managing an inbox that receives a large amount of automated messages unnecessarily tedious.
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
UX Fail: Invisible Title Bar Bounds
The minimalistic design aesthetic that’s pervading the software world has produced some spectacular UX fails. Here is an example from Windows 10. The subject is the humble Notepad application, but the same issue can be seen in other place. Notice how there is no visible separation between the title bar and the menu bar. Both have white background. The problem is that a user with a mouse needs to know the bounds of the title bar in order to be able to drag the window. Without visible bounds and without any other feedback (such as changing of the mouse pointer), the user is left to click and try. Sometimes the window moves, sometimes the window doesn’t move. In other words, a UX fail.
Thursday, September 17, 2015
Announcing Sapphire 9.0.1 Release
On behalf of all who contributed, I am very proud to announce the availability of the Sapphire 9.0.1 release. This release includes a number of fixes in the areas of installation experience, performance and usability. It includes all of the fixes from the 8.2.1 release and is part of the Mars.1 release.
Announcing Sapphire 8.2.1 Release
On behalf of all who contributed, I am very proud to announce the availability of the Sapphire 8.2.1 release. This release includes a number of fixes in the areas of installation experience, performance and usability. It is intended for adopters who are not yet able to require Java 8.