swisscheeseandbullets:

Adam Greenfield has written a great post about Apple’s insistence on using rustic, skeumorphic symbolism for their apps. The little spiral-bound address book, the yellow legal pad, the radio microphone: are these really symbols of 21st century, cutting-edge tech? This use of nostalgic metaphor has bugged me for a while. Sometimes I don’t mind, because they seemed to put some effort and taste into the symbols they used (e.g. the entirely Rams-ian calculator icon … which has unfortunately now been replaced). 
But the quality has recently dropped, most notably with the introduction of iBooks. Those shelves! If you are going to go with a book-on-shelf metaphor (even though iTunes manages perfectly well without trying to look like a box of old vinyl), then at least go for some nice looking shelves (Vitsoe, anyone?). Those wooden ones look like they’ve been fished out of a skip. And then today I noticed something just as bad: I added a PDF to iBooks and it very kindly added a little black plastic comb-bind to it! Why put that extra effort into making something look cheap and nasty?
And surely somebody at Apple HQ has had a look at their iPhone and thought ‘hmm, maybe representing two very different functions with compasses is a bit dumb’ … ?

Yes! this has been bugging me for some time now. Ivy, get involved in the GUI dammit.

swisscheeseandbullets:

Adam Greenfield has written a great post about Apple’s insistence on using rustic, skeumorphic symbolism for their apps. The little spiral-bound address book, the yellow legal pad, the radio microphone: are these really symbols of 21st century, cutting-edge tech? This use of nostalgic metaphor has bugged me for a while. Sometimes I don’t mind, because they seemed to put some effort and taste into the symbols they used (e.g. the entirely Rams-ian calculator icon … which has unfortunately now been replaced). 

But the quality has recently dropped, most notably with the introduction of iBooks. Those shelves! If you are going to go with a book-on-shelf metaphor (even though iTunes manages perfectly well without trying to look like a box of old vinyl), then at least go for some nice looking shelves (Vitsoe, anyone?). Those wooden ones look like they’ve been fished out of a skip. And then today I noticed something just as bad: I added a PDF to iBooks and it very kindly added a little black plastic comb-bind to it! Why put that extra effort into making something look cheap and nasty?

And surely somebody at Apple HQ has had a look at their iPhone and thought ‘hmm, maybe representing two very different functions with compasses is a bit dumb’ … ?

Yes! this has been bugging me for some time now. Ivy, get involved in the GUI dammit.

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    time now. Ivy, get involved in
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This is the digital scrapbook of André Brocatus to hold quotes, examples and links. Primarily on graphic and interaction design until he sees something else which distracts him from his work.

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