On 22/01/2008, niyam bhushan wrote:
[v6]
[...]
[v6a]
I really suck at "find the seven differences". In this case, I can't see any
difference at all between v6 and v6a. It's not that it's not there... it
probably is, I just can't find it.
As to the proposed versioning interface, I have a few comments:
1. There is provision for offering feedback on popularity/quality assessment
rating of each version.
2. Version numbers growing from right to left is a bit odd for westerners,
so this should be part of the locale setting.
3. The proposed view at the bottom acts as a breadcrumbs path along the
document's history, and as such it satisfactory (showing the answer to "how
did I get here?"). It doesn't work as well for newer versions than the
selected one: how do we show the user which neweer versions are available?
In particular, keep in mind that a linear view of newer versions is not
acceptable. For the past, it's OK because the user has chosen one particular
path already, so showing alternative branches is not a priority. But when it
comes to newer branches, we cannot assume that the user will select any one
of them, so we must show a tree, not a list.
4. Since we have a tree structure, I don't know whether numerical version tags
make much sense as they may only reflect the temporal sequence, not the
history. This means that v100 and v101 may be in completely different
branches, and thus have very little in common. I am still trying to figure
out what would be a useful way to tag versions from a user's perspective,
independently of the way how it is implemented in the back-end.
5. There is no provision in the UI to change the selected version to a
different one.
6. I see no way in the UI to see the differences between two versions.
General comments, because they apply to all of our UI:
1. I know that graphic designers *love* to leave wide margins around
everything, but I fear that we are being way too generous with the user's
screen's real estate. Granted, all those gray pixels around the work areas
are pretty, but I fear that many users would prefer us to use them to show
more of the content they are looking at.
2. The UI layout looks pretty in the 16:9 aspect ratio, and certainly is more
than OK in the widescreen configurations most of us are privileged enough to
use, but does it scale well to lower resolutions and 4:3 aspect ratio, which
is still widespread?
Fede
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