On Sun, 19 Apr 2015, Markus Seeber wrote:
On 04/19/2015 01:35 PM, Gordonjcp wrote:
On Sat, Apr 18, 2015 at 11:40:10PM +0100, Harry
van Haaren wrote:
1: Splash Screen
If an app takes more than one quarter of a second to open, use a
splash screen to give feedback. Feel free to contact me directly to
collaborate on a splash screen graphic if necessary. Ensure the splash
is shown immediately, before lengthy operations such as scanning for
Just as long as it's not modal, or better yet make it optional. There's nothing
worse than a big ugly graphic blotting out the middle of your screen preventing you from
doing anything while you wait for some buggy slow piece of crap to load.
Splash screens are a symptom, not a solution.
I think both have a point here. Users, especially Windows users are
often quite strange creatures. They come from an environment where
Software is notoriously slow, bloated and faulty, so for example they
come with a few subconscious expectations and assumptions:
Wheres my popcorn? ;)
Nr 4 did actually happen to a fellow developer in the
past, so what did
he do? After all his effort to uncouple the UI from the background
processing and optimizing the speed and responsiveness of the
application, he silently shed some tears and put in progress bar that
runs for a fixed time of maybe 1.5 Seconds.Now the user can be sure,
that the program has actually received his command and acted (or at
least acted as if it acted) according to the users command. Because
seriously, saving must at least take one second because it is hard work,
otherwise it is obviously broken ;)
In days gone by, save did actually mean put the data on a disk. Now it
means put the data in some memory buffer that the OS will sooner or later
put on the disk. The first meant that when the application said it was
saved, I was ok if the power failed or the powerbar switch was hit. in the
second... a shutdown sequence is a must.
I agree that slowing down an app by putting progress indicators is less
than optimal... at least make it possible to get rid of them. Time is
money or at least has some value and none of us have any to "kill". Adding
complexity for no real gain just feels wrong somehow. I have seen my
workflow slowed down as Linux DEs have windowfied themselves unless I
spend my time to turn this stuff off and optimise it. Having a splash
screen in the middle of my work area for an app I have configured to open
in a corner out of the way is anoying too.
Of course I would rather someone developing software I use, spend time
improving it rather than adding progress indicators... I suspect the
deveoloper feels the same.
--
Len Ovens
www.ovenwerks.net