Mario Borna Mjertan

Mario Borna Mjertan

Developer & designer at Pulsir Joined almost 10 years ago via an invitation from Chris F. Mario Borna has invited

  • 1 story
  • 4 comments
  • 3 upvotes
  • Posted to Ask DN: The Unsolicited Re-Design, Feb 25, 2014

    I'm probably late to the party, but I like them. While they probably aren't based on research or anything, it helps us get ideas for future redesigns, and we might just steal an idea if it's really good - say, if someone had a better idea how to implement a character limit.

    0 points
  • Posted to If your site says "Scroll Down," no., in reply to Mike Anderson , Jan 04, 2014

    I think text is a bad idea, after all, a grandma probably doesn't know the term scrolling, but it should be indicated somehow. Maybe a down-pointing arrow?

    0 points
  • Posted to Why i'm building X-Ray.io, Jan 04, 2014

    While I like the idea, I think comments should be, in most cases, regulated by the site owner. X-Ray isn't a good idea for things like Dribbble, in my opinion.

    0 points
  • Posted to Why Windows Phone is horrid from a UX viewpoint, Nov 02, 2013

    I'd like to comment on the Windows 8 UX. I know it's somewhat off topic, but please don't get mad.

    I've used Windows 8, and it looks nice. The live tiles are useful and everything. The charm bars are cool. If you know how to get to them.

    I installed Windows 8 (because XP gave BSOD's all the time) on my sister's laptop and showed her around. She got it, or so I thought.

    Two days later, she calls me. "How do I close an app?" In Windows 8, you either need to hit ALT+F4 (and that's not really memorable) or go to Start, move your mouse to the top-left corner, drag it down until the bar appears then right-click on the app and click Close.

    I didn't know how to explain that. I tried, but that was a complete failure. After five minutes of trying to explain how to close Metro apps over the phone, I gave up and said "Just pretend that you close it when you hit the Start button, like you do on Android".

    It makes the simple things, which you'd normally do by hitting one button, horrendously complicated. Windows 8 is probably really great on tablets and stuff, but it basically runs that same environment on a computer. Try using iOS on your Mac and see how that works.

    1 point
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