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Why is UI design backsliding?
(lemmy.zip)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
I assume the extra padding was a function of touch screens becoming more prevalent since trying to hit the 2003 style buttons with a finger was not that easy, although I don't remember offhand when touch first started becoming a thing in Windows so it might have happened the other way around. But either way it's likely still a factor in why the ribbon with its extra padding has stuck around.
That's very funny, of course. But if adaptive design and all that crap are so hot today, could they please limit that to touchscreen-first devices? No sane person would actually write a work document or code on a touchscreen if there's a keyboard.
There's nothing about word processors that make them difficult to use with a keyboard and mouse.
New UX has improved that usecase as well.