• caseyweederman
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    561 month ago

    I get unreasonably (okay, reasonably) upset when the simplest way to share an image is to take a screenshot of the image.

    • Madrigal
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      31 month ago

      F12 > Network > Images > (select image) > Save Response As…

      Seems like a lot of steps, but you get the hang of it pretty quickly. And probably faster than cropping your screenshot, plus you get the original without any compression or other degradations.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      Not at all unreasonable imho!

      My other favourite is screenshot > Google lens > select text …

      • Echo Dot
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        91 month ago

        I have to do this all of the time whenever anybody sends me a screenshot of their error message, rather than copying and pasting the error message into the ticket. Or worse still a photo of their screen that shows the error message.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 month ago

          You guys are getting images of errors? It’s like pulling teeth to get that from some users ugh

  • @[email protected]
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    611 month ago

    Isn’t it amazing when text is also not selectable? Like its rendered behind some other shit?

    I fucking hate websites ❤️

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      Like when someone makes an image of text? At least OP set alt text & linked to the source with real text: rare at lemmy.

    • @[email protected]
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      151 month ago

      Or when you try and select a letter and it auto selects the whole fucking work or sentence, jumping all over the place?

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        I HATE that. I like to save things i read or find interesting in Joplin (open source notebook software) and it always has to be this giant fucking undertaking to copy some text off a website. I am annoyed just thinking about it… So i always end up just copying everything on the page instead. Don’t have time for that shit…

    • @[email protected]
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      41 month ago

      The reddit mobile app has broken text selection. I did same thing as OP but with my stylus.

  • @[email protected]
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    101 month ago

    I do it, too. I rarely read any text without subconsciously marking the text while reading it. Might be a tool for me (ADHD) to make it easier not to lose track - I don’t know.

    But regardless of why people do it and while I agree that it’s probably something very specific not a lot of users do, I refuse to believe that anyone actually uses those select->popup-> share features, ever. Often the little pop-up even blocks the text above it which is just insanely bad UX imo.

    Sites should never mess with core functionality without asking (scrolling, selection, tab/keyboard navigation, hijacking common shortcuts/right click, clipboard, history, etc).

    I believe someone came up with that idea a decade+ ago and people just want it on their site to add value without actually checking if anyone uses it.

  • Anas
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    121 month ago

    We went from using no punctuation to using too much. I struggled while reading this.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      The no capitalization makes it hard for me. I think just re-writing with capitalization makes it a lot easier to read:

      Note to UI designers. When reading a long piece of text. I select the text while I read it. I select the text while I read it!. I select the text using my mouse. While I read the text I often select the text. I don’t want to perform actions on the text. I don’t want to accidentally click share link. I want to select the text while I read it.

      Here’s how I would mildly edit the punctuation in order to make it easier to read:

      Note to UI designers; when reading a long piece of text, I select the text while I read it. I select the text while I read it! I select the text using my mouse. While I read the text, I often select the text. I don’t want to perform actions on the text. I don’t want to accidentally click share link. I want to select the text while I read it.

      Here’s how I would have conveyed the thought in a JIRA comment:

      UI designers could you please, for the love of all mankind, stop fucking putting fucking shitty ass popups in the god damn non-mobile website! There is no one, and I mean no-fucking-body, that is still using a desktop computer in 2025 that does not know about ctrl-c and ctrl-v. There is not sane reason for you to ever assume a user wants to visit some shitty twitter/reddit/digg/blog when they select text on a desktop computer. If I see a single one of you motherfuckers putting fucking text inside an action I swear to god I will come down there and beat you to death with your own fucking keyboard.

  • Madrigal
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    1721 month ago

    Modern UI designers don’t have a fucking clue.

    You’d think the first principle would be “don’t break the existing fucking UI”, but no.

    Infinite scroll. Windows without toolbars. Replacing context menu with useless site-specific one. Forcing links to open in new or same tab, depriving the user of choice. Blocking text select. Blocking copy, as if that’s somehow going to stop people from stealing your shitty content. Fucking with the browser history.

    And then there’s the constant reinventing of the wheel. How many times do we need to implement a fucking checkbox?

    No lie, I’ve actually had designers come to me with a concept for “a visual indicator that shows the user how they are progressing through the page”.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      Y’know, my mom studied human factors psychology back around 2000. I remember all kinds of stuff she’d talk about that could make UIs easier to use, understand, and learn from.

      I remember around the time Windows 7 came out, all that type of thinking started being ignored. It seemed like at first it was because it was trendy to look different, and then because the next generation of designers forgot that there was actual science on how to make your stuff usable.

      • @[email protected]
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        161 month ago

        A lot of people making decisions are idiots, or are following the whims of idiots above them.

        Back in like 2017 a company I worked for made a mouse tunnel on their web UI. That’s where like you mouse over a menu, and that opens a sub menu. You mouse into that sub menu, and another menu opens. If at any point your mouse leaves this area, the whole thing closes. It’s shit. It’s been a known bad pattern since like the 90s.

        Product guy wouldn’t listen. Not sure if he didn’t care or didn’t understand. Either is bad.

        This happens all over. People don’t care. They don’t understand. They don’t listen to people that do. They have their own metrics and goals that are disjoint from actual value.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 month ago

          Not much anymore, sorry to say - this was a few decades ago! I remember her showing us some mockups on index cards and other paper-based models, showing what different user actions might display (I was studying computer science at the same time, so it was a bit of a common interest). I also remember her talking about watching groups of users trying to use a piece of software, and using eye tracking along with mouse tracking and other devices to see where their focus tended to be drawn, where they spent their time, etc. as they tried to accomplish certain tasks; studying different aspects of discoverability.

          I also remember she was a big fan of Saturn’s cars - apparently they were big into usability, and as a consequence were easy to maintain and tended to avoid things like problematic blind spots. I do remember changing the headlight was extremely easy - you pulled two pins and the whole headlight assembly popped out!

      • @[email protected]
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        41 month ago

        Pretty much spot on. Late 90s and early 2000s was there height of platforms being very careful and strict about things like HIG (or on the other extreme, “skins”).

        Now UI is barely constrained by those sensibilities and it’s about marketing and showing novelty more than usable.

    • @[email protected]
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      61 month ago

      I’ve actually had designers come to me with a concept for “a visual indicator that shows the user how they are progressing through the page”

      I have seen those on blog and news sites, a thin horizontal bar (sometimes under the floating title) that fills as you scroll to the bottom. I don’t get it either.

      • Madrigal
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        21 month ago

        That was it. So it wasn’t even original stupidity. Sad.

    • flamingos-cantOP
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      881 month ago

      No lie, I’ve actually had designers come to me with a concept for “a visual indicator that shows the user how they are progressing through the page”.

      What the actual fuck, do these people actually use computers.

      My biggest gripe is websites that take control of the browser C-f.

      • @[email protected]
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        721 month ago

        I mean, over the years the scroll bar has got less and less visible. Maybe these people don’t even realise it exists.

        • @[email protected]
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          101 month ago

          MacOS by default hides scroll bars. They’re big on form over function which I hate.

          Some people are just like that.

          I knew a couple that mounted their TV in a way that all the ports (eg: HDMI) were inaccessible. They just didn’t care that a big chunk of the TV’s functionality was now blocked. They didn’t want to see wires.

        • @[email protected]
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          421 month ago

          I hate how tiny it often is now. What the fuck. Not to mention the ever decreasing contrast.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        Web designer/ devs needed to add back visual indicators to long articles when OS designers started hiding scroll bars.

        It’s also helpful when the article ends, but has a bunch of shit below it (like required advertiser garbage or huge footers). If the up dev is smart, they’ll calculate the length of the article so that the progress indicator is accurate.

      • @[email protected]
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        321 month ago
        • You want to navigate somewhere then navigate back? Haha, no.
        • If it’s not implemented properly, resources (images, videos, ads) don’t get unloaded when they’re no longer visible.
        • Some fuckwit wannabe designers actually put the footer UNDER infinite scrolling pages.
        • @[email protected]
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          51 month ago

          If it’s not implemented properly, resources (images, videos, ads) don’t get unloaded when they’re no longer visible.

          Doing this causes it’s own problems. Try searching on a page that unloads everything out of view. Or saving it

      • qupada
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        581 month ago

        As it’s most often seen on news sites - where scrolling too far gives you another article - a handful of reasons.

        One: there are frequently still links (think “about us” / “contact us” kind of pages) in the footer that you might need to access, which you can invariably now never reach, because as soon as they’re in view they’re replaced by more content.

        Two: as the parent poster so accurately put it, “fucking with the browser history”. It becomes entirely indeterminate whether the back button now returns to the previous site, or just goes back by one piece of content.

        Three: the new content is almost certainly unrelated to the page I started on, and not of any interest to me.

        • TJA!
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          241 month ago

          This was just happening to me with Amazon. I wanted to get to the support link in the footer but they always loaded new stuff before I could click on it

      • Fleppensteyn
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        271 month ago

        When you’re dragging the scrollbar down, the page suddenly loads new content and you’re lost.

        When you’re going through a long page and you want to come back to it later, you can’t come back to where you left.

        • @[email protected]
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          221 month ago

          Plus if you want to find older content, you can’t just skip to a page, you need to scroll through every goddamn item until you find what you’re looking for.

    • @[email protected]
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      451 month ago

      Text that doesn’t wrap and goes off screen. Scrollbars that shrink to a single pixel. Universal undo (open multiple Excel Windows and do stuff in all of them. When you undo it will follow your activity instead of being local to the window). Excels crappy copy.

        • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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          71 month ago

          Excel does all those things it does because it’s always done those things it does, and if Microsoft changes it everyone will pitch a fit and probably sue because now they have to retrain their entire accounting department.

          • @[email protected]
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            31 month ago

            I disagree. There are louts of things that would not change old behavior but add so much convenience. Like cell reference for diagram ranges. But nope, we are stuck in 199…4?

            • Madrigal
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              31 month ago

              I love some of the newer things like LET and LAMBDA. But I’d kill for structured references to be properly implemented everywhere. I’m a bit over using INDIRECT to get around it (when I can).

              • @[email protected]
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                31 month ago

                Yes. I have build dynamic diagrams with indirect, I feel ashamed.

                Let us use Python instead of cancerous VBA. You can not even add comments to your variable definitions. Or named vars in functions. Why do I even need macros at all to simply define a function?

                • Madrigal
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                  21 month ago

                  You don’t, any more. At least not for relatively simple functions.

                  LAMBDA combined with the name manager lets you do custom functions even in a regular .xlsx workbook.

                  You don’t get the full control flow and extended functionality you do in VBA, and Python would be amazing of course, but I find LAMBDA covers about 90% of use cases.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 month ago

            The undo and copy behavior for Excel started with office 365. Also the repeat after hitting the end of the redo stack.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      forcing new tabs drives me crazy. like how dare you. i even tried to disable it in firefox, but when i do it makes all ‘open in browser’ things overwrite the current tab :(

      • Madrigal
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        51 month ago

        I hate the opposite even more - sites that block you from opening new tabs when you need to, as if you somehow don’t ever need to be able to access multiple pieces of information concurrently, or return directly to your current context.

        “Oh, we’re following the single-page app paradigm.” No, you’re a fucking website. Follow the fucking website paradigm.

        You can just tell these idiots have never actually done any real work.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 month ago

      How many times do we need to implement a fucking checkbox?

      The vibe coding “paradigm” says: once or twice for every checkbox that appears on the page 😂

    • jawa22
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      41 month ago

      This is a complete misnomer. Modern UI designers that are forced to do what corporate wants are competent. It is large scale marketing that doesn’t have a clue as to what people want in a UX.

  • @[email protected]
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    91 month ago

    I hear you! It sounds like you want user-select: none on all text, because you want the site to feel more like a real newspaper, and having too many features like text selection is distracting you.

  • @[email protected]
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    41 month ago

    In linux land highlighting text can auto copy it and miuse wheel close ck auto pastes. Also i do love to highlight text for read ability

  • @[email protected]
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    101 month ago

    It’s very rare that holding alt while selecting text doesn’t resolve this issue. Assuming you’re on a computer. If you’re not, good luck. Selecting text on phones and tables can be impossible in too many circumstances.

    • flamingos-cantOP
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      141 month ago

      It’s very rare that holding alt while selecting text doesn’t resolve this issue.

      But I’m not actually looking to select the text when I do this, I’m just stimming and the extra visual noise is annoying.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      TL;DR: OP could try using your finger on your phone to keep your place?

      Oh boy. I design UI (games, not software) and OP’s very specific need would stomp on a very common need for why people select text… which is to copy/paste.

      While on a computer, text selection doesn’t typically summon a pop up, it’s needed in mobile because how else would you easily get to copy and paste? Everyone else would rage at the loss of the tooltip and any other interaction would be painfully hidden if it was delegated to a combo of pressing your lock buttons or volume buttons while highlighting text.

      Quick edit: didn’t see the screenshot of the widget, might be the site you’re using, or browser? Also any adblocker add on should be able to hide those elements.

      • flamingos-cantOP
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        21 month ago

        While on a computer, text selection doesn’t typically summon a pop up, it’s needed in mobile because how else would you easily get to copy and paste? Everyone else would rage at the loss of the tooltip and any other interaction would be painfully hidden if it was delegated to a combo of pressing your lock buttons or volume buttons while highlighting text.

        The complaint is specifically about desktop text selection though, the screenshot above says “i select text using my mouse”. I agree that removing the pop-up UI from mobile would suck, well suck more than mobile text selection already does.

        Quick edit: didn’t see the screenshot of the widget, might be the site you’re using, or browser? Also any adblocker add on should be able to hide those elements.

        You’re right, putting ##.quote-share-buttons in my uBlock filter list got rid of it. Still, blocking all these elements myself is really laborious.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 month ago

          Oh yeah, I’m a terrible text block skimmer and desperately need line breaks, punctuation, etc. (Also, not to mention the repetition really triggered my need to skim, lol). That many repeated phrases turned some words into white noise. So that was my bad.

          Good to hear the element blocker works!

          It def sounds tedious to manually block things, but like some comments have mentioned, there are probably some browser add ons that may have the functionality you seek.

  • @[email protected]
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    UI designer/developer here. One who works on features that facilitate reading.

    Based on their writing style and the text highlighting habit, this person is likely dyslexic. I’ve helped create functions that facilitate this behavior, which is better suited as a mode that can be enabled manually. There are browser extensions that can do this sort of thing for you. I’ve worked on a lot of assistive reading features.

    If this was set as a default behavior, most users would fucking riot. Most of them are using text highlighting for what this person doesn’t want to do.

    Edit - I think I need to emphasize that this is based on real data. A shit ton of it. These decisions aren’t made based on vibes. If the user base is performing a specific action repeatedly, we’re going to facilitate it. We can see what you all are doing. UI’s aren’t built around a bunch of conflicting edge cases based on anecdotes. If something performs a certain way, at least major applications, it’s usually because a lot of direct observations and metrics have strongly indicated that this is the preferred approach.

    Admittedly, sometimes business goals get in the way of that. But if those business goals we have to push get in the way of conversions, they get abandoned pretty quickly.

    • @[email protected]
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      161 month ago

      lots of people do it, not just people with dyslexia. it helps keep track of where you are when there are large blocks of text. also it usually raises contrast so I’m sure that helps some people even more.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        it helps keep track of where you are when there are large blocks of text

        So does the edge of the window & mouse pointer.

        also it usually raises contrast

        If the contrast sucks, then the UI is already broken. There are accessibility standards for

        If you’re selecting merely to read, there’s a good chance the text is too small, the lines too long without enough space, the contrast too low, and that would all be addressed by following common web accessibility standards. Good accessibility is good UI.

        16px is commonly considered a good minimum text size for accessibility. When I outgrew thinking tiny text was cool, I standardized interfaces to render at least that size & found a vast improvement.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 month ago

      I think I agree with you. I usually select the text to do an action and the choices are useful. I don’t select for the better reading, if anything it’s just to highlight the text.

    • @[email protected]
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      141 month ago

      (Apologies for my tone below, but this affects me also, and I dislike the notion that messing with how you normally select text is a niche desire)

      We don’t need any new functionality or a custom mode, we just want unexpected popups to not get in the way of expected behaviour when selecting text.

      As long as your options appear well above the text, and doesn’t cancel the highlighting, I can’t accept whatever you want to do. But as the OP writes, if it’s easy to misclick, this is bad UI design because it does not conform to the expectation that nothing will pop up. (Google Docs is the first example that comes to mind as implementing popup options totally fine, from recollection)

      If it’s too close to the selected text and causes misclicks, then I’m gonna be annoyed about this since the vast, vast majority (luckily) of text on the internet you can highlight to your heart’s content and nothing pops up.

      Just keep options decently above the highlighted text (I dunno what the right number is, 2 lines above the start of your selection? hey I’m not a UI designer)

      In conclusion, change is okay, but intuition is important.

      Tantacrul makes some great UI videos if you haven’t seen them before (not that I’m telling you how to suck eggs about your own profession, he’s just genuinely funny and interesting to watch)

    • @[email protected]
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      91 month ago

      I disagree.

      The mode for options is called the right mouse button and the mode for just highlighting is the left mouse button. One of the great pillars of UI design is conforming to expectations.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 month ago

      UI user here.

      A good rule of thumb for interfaces is “one action, one function.” Highlighting text and opening a context menu are two separate functions that should require separate actions (at least as default behavior, user configurability is also a good thing). If I highlight text, the only thing that should indicate is that I want the text highlighted. If I subsequently want a context menu, I will do the context menu action (right click, long press, etc). A UI should never be trying to predict what I want and it absolutely should not be doing things that I didn’t explicitly direct.

      You need sane defaults and having what is effectively a predefined macro is not a sane default.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      We can see what you all are doing.

      No, you are seeing what the people too clueless to install tracking protection are doing.

  • @[email protected]
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    31 month ago

    I do this too, I’m the only one I know who doesn’t think it’s weird to do, I’m glad I’m not alone.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      I’m not sure what it’s a symptom of, but I often mess up reading the correct line when the lines a fairly wide. (I want to say dyslexia? But if I do have that then it’s only mild)

      I point with my finger with physical media also when lines are wide enough. It just helps read faster :3

      I’m also glad to know I’m not alone in highlighting the text as I go

  • Lovable Sidekick
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    41 month ago

    Also please stop using light colored text on light colored backgrounds, it’s a stupid idea. Thanks for your attention.

  • @[email protected]
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    My absolute biggest gripe about the failings of proper UI design is icons with no text attached.

    Floppy, okay surely the save button. Some book looking thing, no fucking clue. An eye in the middle of a square, what the fuck are you people doing???

    Having to hover over a weird looking icon to MAYBE gleam some sort of information on it takes so much longer than just having the fucking text below the God damn icon. Sometimes they don’t even have hover text! Thats GREAT UI skills there, Junior! Maybe you’ll get there eventually!

    Fucking idiots.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 month ago

      The fucking Oblivion Remaster does this all over the UI!! So many vague icons with no text, especially in the magic UI.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 month ago

        My favorite with Oblivion and similar games is, that’s a neat spell name, but what do the effects DO?!

          • Liz
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            11 month ago

            The Rollercoaster Tycoon manual made up game mechanics that didn’t exist.

        • I Cast Fist
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          21 month ago

          I’ve played the old silver box DnD games from 1988 and 1989. The magic effects were listed in the clue book instead of the manual. Talk about purposefully asshole design

          • Captain Aggravated
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            31 month ago

            The Wizardry series of games were very DnD like, but they kind of made up a language for the spell names. You don’t get a fireball, you get Halito. A big fireball is Mahalito. So you need the manual spread across your legs just to know whether you need to cast porfic or calfo on the locked chest in front of you.

            They had more of a tolerance for bullshit back in the 80’s.

    • @[email protected]
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      131 month ago

      Massive +1. I can easily imagine complex 3D shapes in my head and freely manipulate them, but my brain works horrible when it comes to icons for some reason. I can’t intuitively find what I need, not even after months or years. Even after using something for a long time I will constantly hover over all icons to read the tooltips until I find what I need.

      The software I work on at work has a navigation at the top of just icons. I see it every day and I just can’t seem to associate the icons with the functionality.

  • @[email protected]
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    271 month ago

    As someone who doesn’t do this, I can only guess it’s like holding your book mark parallel under the lines in a book as you read it, which I thought was fairly uncommon. Apparently a bunch of people read this way?

    • @[email protected]
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      91 month ago

      It makes more sense on monitors with large blocks of text or large paragraphs. With a monitor so big relative to a book, and scrolling making it easy to lose where you were, it can sometimes be tough for folks to read through huge chunks. Some people select chunks of text to help break up those monoliths into manageable bites along with putting a clear marker for where they are if they scroll or otherwise lose their place…

      • @[email protected]
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        41 month ago

        As someone who does occasionally do this, I don’t think it’s about readability. After all I also read books, which are not known for short bits of text in narrow columns. And I don’t use a bookmark, pen, or finger to keep track of where I’m at.

        I think it’s more about keeping your hand busy, subconsciously even. Although to be honest I also don’t do that while reading books.

        Maybe it’s a remnant of when every computer had a screensaver, and constantly moving the mouse meant keeping the screen alive.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 month ago

          From a usability, accessibility, and comfort perspective a book is incredibly different from a device that’s blasting your eyeballs with highly contrasting light.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 month ago

          For the screens I’m using, a book page is way narrower than the standard text region of a screen.