Revernd Awesome said:
Did the whole thing without clicking once.
I love it, being able to browse so fluidly is great.
I would love to navigate everything like this, it really feels like a step towards the future.
I'd imagine the next step you be a wrist mounted sensor instead of a mouse, you'd simply be able to gesture at what you want and it will open.
The only problem is can forsee is if the entire internet is done like that, a lot of it is would be very poorly designed.
Ohh, that sensor idea is neat...
As for your last line I respond: A lot of the internet today is poorly designed as well
FROGGEman2 said:
I have a laptop, and so I find the gestures, especially the circle gesture, to be very hard.
Overall, I HATE this interface
I have actually been to this site before with a mouse, still hated it.
? I used a laptop as well, so I can't imagine what that has to do with it... I tried it three ways: the touchpad, the nub mouse, and a bluetooth mouse, and found it to be fun all three times. Guess it's just personal opinion.
SuperFriendBFG said:
To me this just doesn't feel natural. I think clicking with a mouse is a superior interface because it bares many similarities to how we interact with our world around us anyways. We don't simply wave our hand over a book to pick it up, we use our fingers to grab it, and that to me is a critical aspect of interaction with a computer.
A solid point. The more posts people make like this, the more it gets me thinking.
wilsonscrazybed said:
It appears to be a very cleverly disguised advertisement for a mouse attachment that makes your mouse easier to grasp. Feel free to correct me if you think I am wrong.
...You mean that pointy thing that keeps you from clicking by stabbing you in the fingers? That seems rather odd, I don't think that makes your mouse easier to grasp in any way!
li-ion said:
I would like to see more websites like that. And not only on websites. I think interfaces stopped to evolve somwhere in the eighties. As Windows-user I double-click every day to start and open things like a well trained monkey. Apple brings out new ideas here and there, but earns enough mockery for doing so.
Now you might argue that you can accidentally do something you don't want to, but then again: I mis-clicked so often, that I don't think it could be much worse with gestures ;-)
And for important things you can still ask for a click to make sure.
...
We are just so well trained in using the mouse that everything else feels awkward (at first), but in my opinion the mouseclick has nothing 'natural' on it. It is intuitive but I found the website intuitive as well.
I admit, Apple has been the major pusher of new interfaces (the Iphone comes to mind), and I heard something interesting about touch-screen tables a while back... I've also misclicked a lot, and I agree that the gesture system couldn't be much worse.
I initially thought that the website was rather silly, but it was once I got a grip on things that I became a fan of it. It strikes me as being intuitive as clicking, just in a different, more freeform way: clicking is more structured and orderly.