Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Microsoft GUI Graphics Windows

Users Decry New Icon Look In Windows 10 516

jones_supa writes A lot of people got upset about the flat looks of Modern UI presented in Windows 8. Recent builds of Windows 10 Technical Preview have now started replacing the shell icons, and to some people they are just too much to bear. Basically, Microsoft opted to change the icons in search of a fresh and modern look, but there are plenty of people out there who claim that all these new icons are actually very ugly and the company would better stick to the previous design. To find out what people think about these icons, Softpedia asked its readers to tell their opinion and the messages received in the last couple of days pretty much speak for themselves. There are only few testers who think that these icons look good, but the majority wants Microsoft to change them before the final version of the operating system comes out.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Users Decry New Icon Look In Windows 10

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 26, 2015 @06:32AM (#49135389)

    why did you vote for Obama? Twice??

    • by Chrisq ( 894406 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @09:00AM (#49135957)

      why did you vote for Obama? Twice??

      Well after the first time we hated the idea of a change

  • by CaptainOfSpray ( 1229754 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @06:37AM (#49135403)
    Microsoft's UI designers will be first up against the wall...
    • by cheekyboy ( 598084 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @06:51AM (#49135445) Homepage Journal

      In the past MS used http://iconfactory.com/ [iconfactory.com]

      They did not use internal staff.

      But the managers that approve it are to go first.

    • by DoofusOfDeath ( 636671 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @08:44AM (#49135877)

      Microsoft's UI designers will be first up against the wall...

      Except they'll have designed the guns, and so you'll have no idea how to shoot them. You'll probably have to end up strangling them with some newfangled "ribbon".

  • Finally (Score:5, Funny)

    by Kvathe ( 3869749 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @06:40AM (#49135409)
    I was withholding my opinion until I heard the expert opinions of random Softpedia readers, but now it seems pretty clear that Windows 10 is a bust.
  • Amateurish (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 26, 2015 @06:44AM (#49135413)
    Those icons look like someone's first pixel art experiments. It seems that Microsoft has fired all of its professional graphics artists.
    • by binarylarry ( 1338699 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @07:53AM (#49135649)

      Actually, these icons were designed by Clippy the AI.

      After he was fired from Windows Help Services, he retrained as a UX technologist and has been leading Microsoft's more recent innovations, like the Windows 8 start menu, the ribbon interface and now a complete revamp of the icons used in Windows.

      He's pretty much Microsoft's Jony Ive these days.

      • by Demonoid-Penguin ( 1669014 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @08:21AM (#49135779) Homepage

        Actually, these icons were designed by Clippy the AI.

        Nope. He was the graphics lead developer - till he got promoted to director of human resources. All icon design is now open source. Open sourced (Embrace, Extend, Extinguish) to galahs. It used to be monkeys which they fed peanuts. But peanuts, and monkeys are expensive - so they were replaced with galahs that are fed crayons. Sort of avian Pollock - but much, much cheaper.

        It's tough being a galah living on crayons and crapping on desktop for a living, so the poor bastards work nights designing web interfaces for online banking sites.

        Ever wondered why those sites need a dozen different javascripts pulled from different sites? It's because galahs fed bad acid don't care much about security - they're too busy implementing flash advertising overlays and inserting Facebook/Twitter buttons (sigh).

        [Steve Balmer monkey dance] Shareholders! Shareholders! Shareholders! (the root of all evil).

    • Re:Amateurish (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Dogtanian ( 588974 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @10:46AM (#49136699) Homepage

      Those icons look like someone's first pixel art experiments. It seems that Microsoft has fired all of its professional graphics artists.

      The problem is that- in terms of style- either they can't make up their mind what they are, or they're trying to have it both ways.

      They're neither sufficiently clean and flat to match the current style of graphic design (which they went for with Windows 8), but nor do they work particularly well as 3D or prettified icons, or any other style in their own right.

      The end result is that they just look like horribly underdesigned versions of "old school" icon design circa XP to Windows 7. And some (e.g. the warning "!" triangle and error "X" circle) just look badly designed full stop.

      The colours are also far too bright to be used in large, solid blocks like that. It's probably no coincidence that the "flat" trend in general was accompanied by the rising use of *slightly* less fully-saturated colour (see here [pimoroni.com] for an example); not dull by any means, but more tolerable for solid blocks than (e.g.) #FF0000 red etc. (*)

      I grew to hate the use of bland gradients of the previous design trend (early Web 2.0 and later) and the glossy 3D effect started to get overdone (and cheesy) when adopted by every man and his dog. So I'm a fan of the flat look when it works. The problem (which I figured out at the start of the trend) is that if it's not done well, it can easily come across as being simply underdesigned or crude, and as it becomes more widespread it's likely to become adopted by people who can't tell the difference.

      (*) Mind you, that was also a trend elsewhere, e.g. in clothing.

  • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @06:48AM (#49135437)

    Yeah, they're doubling down on the "modern" look, which essentially translates to "flat and ugly" to me. I sort of knew that going in when I saw the Windows 8 styling hadn't changed. Microsoft's Windows 10 is shaping up to be pretty nice in terms of usability. I've been testing it out, and it's fixed most of the most horrible aspects of Windows 8, by which I mean they've pretty much chopped them out and replaced them with UI systems that actually work on a desktop. It's shaping up to be what Windows 8 should (or could) have been. But damn... it's still as ugly as sin.

    I guess they're still trying to prove that they can ignore overwhelming customer feedback in a way that's uniquely suited to mega corporations. Seriously, I can't wait until this design trend ends, and people look back like we now do at 70's fashion trends and say, "Dear God, what were we thinking? We really thought that was cool?"

    Also:

    Keep in mind that this is still a Technical Preview build and the icons we see here might not make it to the final version of Windows 10

    Hahahaha, oh man... that's just adorable. Seriously, they're not going to change them because a few people are bitching about them at this point.

    • by operator_error ( 1363139 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @07:20AM (#49135549)

      I predict one day the UX/UI trend will be glossy, even glass-like; what with reflections, highlights, shadows, textures and all.

      • I predict that about 1hour after installing Win10 (a job requirement sadly), mine will have classic WinXP theming like my 8.1 build does. And if MS try to block the UxStyle theming hack, I'm pretty confident whatever pitiful hack they used to kill it will be broken within hours.

        UxStyle already supports Win10 technical preview :)

    • I do agree they are butt ugly, but honestly I haven't never cared much about these things, heck in windows 7 I used to use the classic shell look, when I changed to 8 they dropped that option and I did not really care that much. What really pisses though is those damn fat window borders, I actually looked up the register keys to change them and I use my windows machine pretty much only for gaming and occasional browsing. I think they are that way because of touch screen support. In my opinion windows XP had

    • flat and ugly like your sister, trebek!

      Sorry, couldn't help myself.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

      The modern flat look can look good, but only if your UI is simple to begin with. I'm actually surprised that more Slashdot users aren't enjoying it when it works, because they complain bitterly about Ribbon interfaces and the like.

      Look at Google's Android apps. Most have two or three icons on screen at most, so can get away with simple bold layouts and minimal graphics. The usually have a menu icon that opens a text menu, rather than a ribbon or some other graphical list that requires you to understand what

  • 8bit (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jklovanc ( 1603149 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @06:49AM (#49135441)

    They look like they are from the seventies and using an 8 bit colour pallet.

    • by dissy ( 172727 )

      They look like they are from the seventies and using an 8 bit colour pallet.

      Except even in GEoS from the seventies with a not-quite-8-bit color pallet was still capable of showing the differences between each type of GUI widget, and between widget and non-widget.

      Win8/10 (and iOS7+, and Unity) fail to differentiate buttons from drop-down menus from checkboxes from radio buttons from text input fields.
      You can only tell widget from non-widget by the different square of color, which can and does happen frequently between different areas in a non-widget background image as well.

      It more

  • ...that thinks the new icons actually look quite nice? I will reserve judgement until I see them at the smallest size though (i.e. in "details" view).
    • I was thinking the same. But change must always be met with a lot of opposition it seems.

  • by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @07:00AM (#49135481)
    ...there is nothing seriously wrong in that OS (to be fair).
    • by Warbothong ( 905464 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @08:17AM (#49135747) Homepage

      It's a classic case of Bike Shedding [wikipedia.org].

      "These icons look crappy"
      "Thanks for the feedback. What do you think about the switch to user-mode signed driver binaries?"
      "No idea. But these icons look crappy"

    • by dissy ( 172727 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @08:18AM (#49135757)

      Well to be completely fair, there are a TON of very nice features being put in Win10, on top of a ton of things fixed that they broke in Win8.

      No GUI requirement similar to the choice of installing xorg (I believe introduced in server 2012?), a powershell version of apt-get using the windows tailored chocolatey package format, fixed the stupidest of GUI changes from Win8 such as no desktop by default and whatever they call the app tiles thing, improved filesystem and network file sharing (the latter bringing a HUGE speed boost, both being more parallelized), etc.

      They are trying out a different (and IMHO better) upgrade path, and hopefully all that is claimed about the new IE will come true which will finally begin closing the huge gap between it and pretty much any other browser.

      Sure there is still plenty of time between now and release day to drop the ball on for anything above, but I dare say direction under their new CEO has been pretty damn positive so far, and leaps and bounds better than when under Balmer (though I admit that is a pretty low bar anyway)

      As someone who hates Windows mainly due to being forced to support it and its bullshit for the past 20 years, even I am quite impressed with the changes between Win7 and Win10, and don't have much to complain about. We will see if that still holds true after release of course.

      But I can't help but agree, a lot of the serious problems are being or have been addressed.

      We only complain about the icons and lack of theme support to fix them because Microsoft asked us, petty as that may seem.

  • by itsdapead ( 734413 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @07:08AM (#49135509)

    Hello oblique projection! Here's to the white heat of progress, they've made finally Windows 10 look as graphically sophisticated as Q*bert.

    Maybe in another 20 years they'll re-discover perspective.

  • Bad usability, man (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Misagon ( 1135 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @07:13AM (#49135531)

    The biggest problem with the new icons is not lack of beauty but that the overly stylistic design has made them more difficult to visually parse.

    The purpose of icons is to make recognition of objects on the screen easier. The use of three dimensions, contrasting edges, shading and shadows are significant visual aids - and those are the things that these new icons lack the most. It takes more than Photoshop skills to earn the title of UX Designer.

  • HiDPI (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jones_supa ( 887896 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @07:20AM (#49135547)
    I guess operating systems acquiring HiDPI support is one of the reasons going for the flat look. Vector graphics are easy to scale. But maybe some genius will eventually come up with a system that both scales well and looks cool. Some might also say that good appearance isn't the be-all and end-all, but we had quite nice thing going on with Aero, so why go backwards in evolution. The window zoom animations look really good in Windows 10 though.
    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      Scaling is a one-off for the particular size of screen.

      There's almost zero overhead in keeping the icons as SVG or similar, and rendering to a bitmap in the device dpi that you require, and then using that bitmap until the screen resolution changes.

      Cache enough of them and after the first few resolution changes, you'll never have to render the SVG on that machine again.

      So the "scalable has a cost" rules go out of the window, really. And even back in the 90's, did you ever see the stuff you could do with ve

    • You can make shadows gradients and most visual effects in vector graphics, I can not think anything a icon might try to do that could not be done easily in vector graphics.

      Disclaimer: I am not a graphics artist expert, if someone could point something that can not be done well in vector graphics I would like to know.

  • by wiredog ( 43288 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @07:37AM (#49135601) Journal

    The same one the Mac OS got hit with in the most recent release.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 26, 2015 @07:43AM (#49135617)

    The sooner idiot 'designers' stop using this stupid phrase to try to justify their inability to design properly, the better...

    'Flat' UI design is BAD design, plain and simple. If it ain't broke, don't fix it.

  • by Crookdotter ( 1297179 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @07:56AM (#49135659)
    The icons look unfinished as a set. The image linked to shows some hard drives as flat, and some as the old, 3D shaded variety. The folders have a cutout on the right hand side that seems missing from the music folder, but it's there in the downloads variety. You can't see the cutout for documents and others so it looks out of place.

    But the my computer icon. Just look at that for 10 seconds. I hereby rename it to the 'Oh My God computer icon'. It's incredibly awful.

    Please, no.
  • Fits right in (Score:4, Insightful)

    by TACD ( 514008 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @07:57AM (#49135663) Homepage
    The new Windows logo looks like it was made in MS Paint by a child, and these folder icons fit right in to that aesthetic. Good to see Microsoft bringing some visual consistency to their OS.
  • Silliness (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DoofusOfDeath ( 636671 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @08:05AM (#49135693)

    I'd be completely happy with keeping the Windows 7 UI, and just having each Windows release upgrade the guts underneath. And I bet so would 95% of corporations.

    I don't understand why Microsoft feels to compelled to tinker with the UI at this point. (Yes I've heard some reasons, I just don't see why they're compelling to Microsoft.)

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Kvathe ( 3869749 )
      Easy, people are less likely to pay for a new product if it looks just like the old one.
      • by itzly ( 3699663 )

        The only reason many people get new windows is because it comes with the computer. And they get a new computer because the old one broke, or has too much malware on it. They won't see the icons on the desktop until they get it home and turn it on.

    • They probably already went so far with the Modern UI strategy that they can't go back. They are now using that as the base to try to make something useful. At least things are more unified than in Windows 8, which featured a unelegant mix of classic Windows widgets and Modern stuff.
  • For me, the ugliest element is the title bar. The dark blue and black elements are very difficult to see (no contrast). Furthermore, the title bar buttons look like they are mis-aligned.

    • Addendum to my previous gripe: Looks like Microsoft wants to transform the title bar into another toolbar. Let's put buttons everywhere! Who needs consistency?

  • by swb ( 14022 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @08:20AM (#49135767)

    It seems to me that the constant "overhaul" of a GUI to change icons, menu structures, etc is bad design. Not because the final product is necessarily bad, but because whatever improvements the new design brings are dwarfed by the cost of throwing away of user knowledge about the old interface and the cost of re-learning a new interface and its symbols and structure.

    There's probably even unconsidered effects. A lot of clients I've worked with have resisted upgrades (they own and have paid for) to Office because of the radical changes in look and feel. By running older versions with weaker security, they're now exposed to greater risk of compromise by malware. There may even be meaningful losses in productivity from missing new features or improved implementations of existing functionality. This can even be made even worse by resisting operating system updates.

    I've always been puzzled that some of the best minds in user interface design get together and say "obviously, the best solution is to throw out everything the users have learned and give them something totally different."

    • Have you noticed that Microsoft loves to tell developers how their Windows application need to look, but break their own rules with Office, VS and other products of theirs. Constant change and inconsistency is the modus operandi of the day.

  • by MagickalMyst ( 1003128 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @09:13AM (#49136031)
    The biggest problem for most users (especially non-technical users) when changing Windows versions (upgrading is a bit of a misnomer, imho), is how the UI changes with every version.

    By the time end users start to feel comfortable navigating around in Windows and learning what is where (i.e; WinXP: control panel -> add/remove programs), they are forced to 'upgrade' to the latest version of Windows and have to relearn the UI again (i.e; Win7: control panel -> programs and peatures).

    As a technical user I find this very frustrating. For non-technical users, this is hell.

    Every version of Windows seems to do this, and it is absolutely ridiculous.

    On the bright side, there are alternatives. Thanks Linus! :)
  • Mac heretic here (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Muad'Dave ( 255648 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @09:26AM (#49136113) Homepage

    Apple did the same thing with OSX 10.10 / Yosemite. The 'new' icons are flat and just plain nasty. I assume everyone wants to 'streamline the user experience' across phones, tablets, watches, and real computers, but I think pandering to the lowest common denominator is just a bad idea.

  • by astro ( 20275 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @09:38AM (#49136173) Homepage

    I am in the minority camp, I guess. I actually quite like the flattened look of the Win10 UI, including the icons. I am using it on my primary desktop with very few problems at all.

    • by PPalmgren ( 1009823 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @02:37PM (#49139263)

      I think part of the flat icon craze is directly related to touch interfaces. Our mind, like it or not, sees 'bubbly' icons or buttons like the old XP start menu as an item where pressing on the edges is no good, like accidentally pressing the edge of a real-world rounded button and it not fully depressing. In a touch interface, this gives the illusion that the contact area is much smaller than it actually is, and makes for a hesitant approach. 'Flat' icons or targets give the impression that you can register a press on any part of the item. This is important on touch interfaces where tactile feedback is limited and your big fingers block what you're actually pressing.

      This becomes quite obvious when looking at some of the old touchscreen keyboard UIs on the early touchscreen-era phones. The start of 'flat' UIs didn't come from windows 8, it came from the touchscreen phone. As someone else mentioned, DPI scaling might also be a factor, but this also came from the DPI race on touchscreen phones.

  • Visual Studio (Score:4, Informative)

    by BradleyUffner ( 103496 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @09:40AM (#49136183) Homepage

    This happened a few years ago for the iconography in Visual Studio (2010 I believe) too, and the users were up in arms. It took what felt like a tremendous amount coordinated feedback over a very long time to get some very small concessions from Microsoft. If you don't like it you had better start letting them know about it now and en-mass, because this decision will have a LOT of inertia behind it. It won't be easy to get them to change their minds at this point.

  • by AbRASiON ( 589899 ) * on Thursday February 26, 2015 @10:23AM (#49136509) Journal

    NOT because it's good
    NOT because it's intuitive
    because designers told us it's good so most idiots say "this is in, it's good"
    It's as bad as fucking fashion, for fucks, fucking sakes.

    I'm SO over it, websites, phone apps, now phone OS's - everything is going SINGLE colour FLAT, no shading, NO DIVIDING LINES (ARGH) just complete white space (or any other colour)
    The new dialler on the Samsung iteration of Lollipop is disgusting. All the numbers are just on one big flat shaded mess.
    Forget about what's "cool" forget about aesthetics, tell me which one of these looks easier to hit the fucking numbers on?
    http://www.sammobile.com/wp-co... [sammobile.com]

    It's 19'th level, fucking desk smashingly frustrating. I'm a NERD, I'm a GEEK, I'm a fucking IT guy, I WANT TO DO THINGS AS FAST AS HUMANLY FUCKING POSSIBLE. The only thing holding me back should be my fingers, my computer or my device. I should not be sitting there mentally processing shit because it's obfuscated with poor design.

    The textless icon 'fad' (which saves them translation costs) is probably the worst part. It's full spec kitten stamping insanity. I don't give 2 fucks if the wifi icon is ubiquitous, they have now dozens if not hundreds of icons for applications across the world on iOS, android, windows which are fucking meaningless and we're meant to know what they do.
    "Well just press them to learn once" NO - a, that could be a bad thing I don't want to do and b, EVERY time I see the icon, I wonder "is that?...." I shouldn't think that. I should see the text too. The more I can instantly relate to the better.
    I even think (despite it likely being ugly) that we should be consider using colours more.
    Wouldn't it be nice if the 'send' button was always not only a "play" looking icon on my Android device, but it was LABELLED "send" and it was ALWAYS green.
    Delete / trash icon? Always a trash bin, ALWAYS labelled with text, ALWAYS red? That's THREE fast things which will help me very very (very!) quickly identify what i want to click.

    I tire so much of the 0.4'th of a second it takes my brain to 'double check' if I'm going to press the right thing. Those 0.4'ths wouldn't exist if this shit was done properly.

    I apologise for ranting but this stuff is BAD, it's UGLY and it's SHIT and I'm ultra sick of it. It's hipster, flat, bland, wank for the sake of wank and it's costing me time.

    One more thing, I no longer work in IT support. It was hard enough as it is when I did it, I couldn't begin to empathise enough with some poor piece of shit helpdesk guy now, who not only has to do that work but tell them "no click the icon that looks like an old cupboard but with 2 circular dials on it, no it's up the top right, no there's no colour, no there's no label, yeah it looks like........" for fucks sake.
    Madness, utter madness.
    LABEL things
    put COLOUR on things
    USE DIVIDING LINES - 1 pixel thick lines to separate sections ain't gonna kill anyone

    If you work in the UI / UX industry and support this stuff. Kill yourself
    No, I mean it, actually kill yourself, you're a scourge on technology.

    • by dbIII ( 701233 )
      It could be worse.
      There could be no icons at all but somehow you are expected to know to go to the corner and then they will pop onto the screen.
      Oh, that bit of stupidity is already in use isn't it?
  • by bravecanadian ( 638315 ) on Thursday February 26, 2015 @11:09AM (#49136923)

    News at 11..

Living on Earth may be expensive, but it includes an annual free trip around the Sun.

Working...