xcomcmdr wrote on 2021-10-10, 07:21:
Bruninho wrote on 2021-10-09, 22:12:
Because WinMess 11 sucks, that's it. I'm done with it. It's completely counter intuitive to use, hard to configure/customize, slow and UAC piss me off since its introduction ages ago. I don't wanna mess with this garbage again. Already deleted it.
UI wise, macOS sucks way harder.
I work as an UI/UX Designer, and I can tell you that this is not true. My years of experience with macOS has always been fast, intuitive, easy, smooth and straight to the point. Even Ubuntu was closer to that with much less effort.
Where as with Windows was always the opposite since Vista days. Do you want to know what really sucks way harder?
Android and Windows 11. Both have the worst user experience I have ever tested. Great fight…
I just reverted the VM back to Win 10 Pro. People here trying to blame my machine and everything else but it’s not a machine problem, not a performance problem, its an UX/UI problem with Windows 11. Worst first time experience ever with a “brand new” OS. An entire night trying to figure out where the things are, how to do this or that, hours searching on google when you couldn’t figure it out by yourself, this is a sign of bad UX, a good UI/UX is like a good joke, you shouldn’t have to explain it later. It should just work straight out of the box.
I couldn’t install any of my Adobe suite except Xd, but Xd was already an UWP app, while on Win 10 I was able to install pretty much smoothly all three apps I need for work (Ps, Ai, Xd). The “new” start menu is horrible because you can’t remove the “recommended” bullshit that appears below the pinned apps, you can’t do this or that anymore (there’s a review on WindowsCentral that pretty much sums up a similar experience with the UI) and last but not least, the UI is far from finished. I can spot several problems like one with the dropdowns; when you select “more options” it shows a new dropdown with a small blue bar when hovering the options, as opposed to the “standard” glass style dropdowns. I’d take a screenshot to show it if I hadn’t deleted the VM after spotting and being annoyed with several problems of usability.
I couldn’t easily get my work certificates to be recognized by Edge to access an website where I generate the monthly receipts for my employer to pay me, I had to google for some time to find out that I had to clear the cache completely and reopen Edge. While on macOS I just import them to Keychain Access and they’re recognized straight out of the box by all my installed browsers, not just Safari, which I need for cross browser testing.
I have to hack the registry to be able to customize the spacing of desktop icons. Really, ridiculous UX. While on macOS all I have to do is right click, open a small modal with slider controls to choose icon size and spacing, in an easy and intuitive way.
I won’t even mention the UX for the new Settings app…
The overall user experience from W10 to W11 has worsened much, much more than it was when Windows 8 came in. Windows 11 did not pass my UI/UX tests.
//End Rant
"Design isn't just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works."
JOBS, Steve.
READ: Right to Repair sucks and is illegal!