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What is the best user interface you've ever used? One that made doing your task a pleasure, that was perfectly designed for the task it was intended for and facilitated doing it with ease. One that made you want to somehow locate the creators over the internet, personally fly to their location, and then hand them large pile of money.

What made it so great? Was it simplicity, unobtrusiveness? Screenshots are a plus.

Related question: Worst UI Ever.

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"The only intuitive user interface is the nipple. Everything else is learned." – Adam Davis Feb 2 at 18:13
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If only they would replace everything else with nipples. – CiscoIPPhone Mar 26 at 11:59
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"The only intuitive user interface is the nipple. Everything else is learned." You've obviously never had a baby who had difficulty breastfeeding! – Donnelle Aug 6 at 2:36
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How come the top answers don't have an images of those best UI's?? – Oscar Reyes Oct 15 at 23:17
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125 Answers

vote up 1 vote down
  1. Windows XP. I've tried Gnome, KDE, MacOS, Vista. XP UI is definitely a masterpiece from perspective of a pro-user. Don't get me wrong, bash rocks as well, just a different beast.
  2. uTorrent. A very clean minimalistic UI.
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  • Memory resident text editor Sidekick. Back in the nineties.
  • DOS.
  • Turbo Pascal.
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vote up 7 vote down

Cinema 4D - 3D editing and animation is very hard to make user friendly due to the inherent complexity of working in 4 dimensions, but this one is as intuitive as they get. I frequently use it as a point of reference when designing my own UIs.

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animation of course – Carson Myers Jun 18 at 22:30
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The best UI I've ever used is my Smith & Wesson 357 Mag.

The first "Point-and-shoot" user interface. I must admit that it is VERY intuitive. ;)

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There are a lot of humorless people here at StackOverflow. – BoltBait Nov 14 '08 at 19:55
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OP: Don't you find that using the hardware sometimes has unintended consequences? Frankly it doesn't seem like the type of system a child could pick up and master without any training or supervision. – theycallmemorty Mar 26 at 12:09
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I'm not convinced it's a great UI. Easy to use, but the UI makes it too easy to shoot yourself in the foot. Thank you, thankyouverymuch. I'll be here all week. – Bryan Oakley Mar 26 at 13:48
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I couldn't find the undo feature. – Scott Langham Mar 28 at 1:04
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If you got a tablet try out Autodesk Sketchbook sometimes .

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Zonealarm (when it was really simple).

It was just a firewall that worked. It didn't ask hard technical questions. My mum could set up permissions without knowing what a firewall was or why she needed it. It just worked.

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TiVo - because it has the classic "blip blip blip" audio fast-forward cues which greatly enhance the experience.

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The original Napster - it wasn't pretty but it did what it needed to do in a very simple and intuitive way.

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Amazon. It's simple, but very effective.

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Too much crap jammed into the front page for my tastes... – Will Oct 26 '08 at 21:12
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+0 too much crap on every page (except the page where they ask for money. They don't even have a link back to amazon.com) – sigjuice Mar 26 at 10:48
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Adobe Photoshop. Amazing.

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    From: patl@athena.mit.edu (Patrick J. LoPresti)
    Subject: The True Path (long)
    Date: 11 Jul 91 03:17:31 GMT
    Newsgroups: alt.religion.emacs,alt.slack

    When I log into my Xenix system with my 110 baud teletype, both vi
    *and* Emacs are just too damn slow.  They print useless messages like,
    'C-h for help' and '"foo" File is read only'.  So I use the editor
    that doesn't waste my VALUABLE time.

    Ed, man!  !man ed

    ED(1)               Unix Programmer's Manual                ED(1)

    NAME
         ed - text editor

    SYNOPSIS
         ed [ - ] [ -x ] [ name ]
    DESCRIPTION
         Ed is the standard text editor.
    ---

    Computer Scientists love ed, not just because it comes first
    alphabetically, but because it's the standard.  Everyone else loves ed
    because it's ED!

    "Ed is the standard text editor."

    And ed doesn't waste space on my Timex Sinclair.  Just look:

    -rwxr-xr-x  1 root          24 Oct 29  1929 /bin/ed
    -rwxr-xr-t  4 root     1310720 Jan  1  1970 /usr/ucb/vi
    -rwxr-xr-x  1 root  5.89824e37 Oct 22  1990 /usr/bin/emacs

    Of course, on the system *I* administrate, vi is symlinked to ed.
    Emacs has been replaced by a shell script which 1) Generates a syslog
    message at level LOG_EMERG; 2) reduces the user's disk quota by 100K;
    and 3) RUNS ED!!!!!!

    "Ed is the standard text editor."

    Let's look at a typical novice's session with the mighty ed:

    golem$ ed

    ?
    help
    ?
    ?
    ?
    quit
    ?
    exit
    ?
    bye
    ?
    hello? 
    ?
    eat flaming death
    ?
    ^C
    ?
    ^C
    ?
    ^D
    ?

    ---
    Note the consistent user interface and error reportage.  Ed is
    generous enough to flag errors, yet prudent enough not to overwhelm
    the novice with verbosity.

    "Ed is the standard text editor."

    Ed, the greatest WYGIWYG editor of all.

    ED IS THE TRUE PATH TO NIRVANA!  ED HAS BEEN THE CHOICE OF EDUCATED
    AND IGNORANT ALIKE FOR CENTURIES!  ED WILL NOT CORRUPT YOUR PRECIOUS
    BODILY FLUIDS!!  ED IS THE STANDARD TEXT EDITOR!  ED MAKES THE SUN
    SHINE AND THE BIRDS SING AND THE GRASS GREEN!!

    When I use an editor, I don't want eight extra KILOBYTES of worthless
    help screens and cursor positioning code!  I just want an EDitor!!
    Not a "viitor".  Not a "emacsitor".  Those aren't even WORDS!!!! ED!
    ED! ED IS THE STANDARD!!!

    TEXT EDITOR.

    When IBM, in its ever-present omnipotence, needed to base their
    "edlin" on a Unix standard, did they mimic vi?  No.  Emacs?  Surely
    you jest.  They chose the most karmic editor of all.  The standard.

    Ed is for those who can *remember* what they are working on.  If you
    are an idiot, you should use Emacs.  If you are an Emacs, you should
    not be vi.  If you use ED, you are on THE PATH TO REDEMPTION.  THE
    SO-CALLED "VISUAL" EDITORS HAVE BEEN PLACED HERE BY ED TO TEMPT THE
    FAITHLESS.  DO NOT GIVE IN!!!  THE MIGHTY ED HAS SPOKEN!!!

    ?
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LOL - LONG LIVE ED! – Adam Davis Feb 2 at 18:09
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roflol, lmao :) – knittl Aug 18 at 13:30
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MacOS X Tiger/Leopard iWorks iLife, Office 2007, Picassa and StackOverflow...I think they are inspiring when you have to design a UI...

Cheers from argentina!

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  • Google
  • Stackoverflow.com
  • Basecamphq.com
  • Slickrun - the best launcher i have used (www.bayden.com)
  • Keynote - the best note taking program i have used
  • Todo List - the best to do list software
  • Mindmanager - Great Mindmaps
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You get +1 for MindManager, I remember it being very quick and easy to use, way back when I used to... – Rob Mar 18 at 23:45
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vote up 116 vote down

I'm really happy with Google Chrome.

It's missing some features I think are really important, so it's not perfect software, but the UI is great.

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Google Chrome does not really have an innovative UI - it is, however, extremely fast, and works quite well. (Example: You accidently close a tab. How do you undo that mistake? Ctrl+Z does the trick in Opera) – Arafangion Mar 18 at 23:39
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Ctrl+Shift+T opens the most recently closed tab. I was really happy when I found that shortcut :) – Aistina Mar 22 at 12:53
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Yeah, Ctrl-Shift-T is awesome. – Jay Bazuzi Mar 22 at 14:37
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Ctrl+Shift+T : this is pure "copy / paste idea" from Firefox :) – Olivier Pons Jun 4 at 21:05
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Autodesk Animator had one of the best GUIs ever created, in my opinion. Its creators seemed to base their design on the realization that a UI that is easy for a novice to understand and use is not necessarily a productive UI for an expert user, and that most users eventually get past the point where they need constant hand holding, and therefore designing a UI that's geared towards an expert user results in software that is more productive and easier to use - in the long run.

Productive use of the UI required one hand on the mouse and the other hand on the keyboard for changing mouse modes. I've seen expert users fly through operations that would have required multiple menu selections on more conventionally designed software, and even I - by no means an Autodesk Animator expert - still miss that streamlined workflow sometimes.

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vote up 30 vote down

I would have to say Paint.NET

It is a very powerful editor and very intuitive.

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It's certainly better than their website UI... – annakata Jan 12 at 11:24
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Little things in Paint.NET irritates me, if you have nothing selected on your canvas, then you hit the "select region" button, it selects the entire canvas automatically -- 95% of the time, I want to select a sub region, so I have to hit "de-select all" and then I can select my region. sigh – Juliet Jan 23 at 17:09
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3D Studio Max - very complex and friendly UI.

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vote up 82 vote down

The iPod is one of the better interfaces I've ever used. Especially once they went to the click-wheel.

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The click-wheel is good, but the interface on my ipod (generation 4) is not flexible enough for power users. For example, if you have a playlist you can see only its song titles, but not the albums or artists of the songs. So browsing through a playlist to select a certain song is really hard. – dehmann Feb 2 at 0:00
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These comments are full of hatorade. The mere fact that so many people fluently use an iPod every day is a testament to its good design – Stuart B Sep 3 at 15:12
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@Stuart: not necessarily; that could just be evidence of effective marketing. – Jay Bazuzi Oct 3 at 0:03
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vote up 81 vote down

The iPhone

I keep finding wonderful stuff it does. Like when you browse to a web page in Safari that has a telephone number in it when you touch the number it dials it for you.

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Actually it is life changing. I had a meeting last week with a new client 400 odd miles away. Before I left I just took their website address and city. I looked up the site when I got there, found their address and location (with maps) then found and booked a nearby hotel via the phone. – Cruachan Oct 26 '08 at 20:44
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Best interface?! Rubbish. You can't even multi-task. – Dynite Jan 23 at 17:33
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Don't like giving negative votes, but the interface, for a mobile device, is pretty poor... 1- touchscreen sure, but moving between several apps open? (reference: WinMo, S60) 2- Accelerometer great, but using it to do something HANDY like changing options? (reference: iPod Shuffle) – Pat Feb 2 at 0:38
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@Daniel: Apple is a religion. While they sometimes do very nice things, that unfortunately leads a large number of people to fanatically defend them in the face of absurdities. – Rob Mar 18 at 23:40
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I really really dislike Mac and it's production (mainly cause of their marketing strategy and community), but i must admit that they aren't bad at creating nice UI. – Arnis L. Jul 10 at 10:58
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I'm usually pretty down on Microsoft products, but I have to admit that I think the UIs for both Word and Excel are spot on. All of the most commonly used features are front and center where I can easily find them. There are tons of other features packed into the menu, and I can customize the toolbar if I frequently use features outside the normal set.

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vote up 6 vote down
  • Word 2007. The Ribbon is awesome and live preview is fantastic functionality.
  • Windows Explorer. Simple and straightforward. Makes work on the file system a breeze.
  • Winamp. Again, simplicity.
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Since @splattne already mentioned the Office 2007's ribbon I have to write my second best:

Total Commander

Simple & powerful interface. 2 big important panels, few buttons, keyboard shortcut for everything. Most used program for me, I can't imagine copying, moving and organising files using multiple explorer windows.

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Total Commander is fantastic program when speaking about features. But the UI is one of the poorest I know of. Everything is weird and done differently that you would expect (F2 is used to rename files everywhere, but it is Shift+F6 in TC), probably some legacy of old DOS two pane file managers – Josef Sábl Jan 20 at 12:44
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If you used Dos Navigator and Nortom Commander back then it's the most useful application for Windows in the world. If you didn't use any of the mentioned dos applications, then Total Commander is just something sitting on your computer. – SztupY Jun 21 at 0:05
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vote up 12 vote down

I am not going to post a single, and doubt there's a "best" in my experience. Some great UIs:

  • Adium -
    highly customizable multiple-service IM client. I've seen it all tricked out, but I have it configured to be extremely minimalist.
  • Transmission -
    full-featured torrent client, with an extremely minimalist UI. Has nearly all of the features of Azureus, with none of the bloat and very little of the heavy UI.
  • Versions -
    GUI for Subversion. My favorite aspect is that it has a single interface for repositories and working copies. Highly customizable but also very simple; well integrated with the OS.
  • FileMerge -
    Apple's Diff GUI. I listed this because it has excellent visualization of changes (they are visibly connected, and scrolling side by side correctly keeps unchanged lines adjacent).
  • Balsamiq Mockups -
    UI sketch up tool. It isn't actually a particularly great UI, but it's the best I know of. It makes designing UI concepts dead simple and has a wealth of built in widgets.
  • Reason -
    I realize this is not a terribly great UI, but it is absolutely the best in music software that I've worked with, and does a great job of matching UI to task.
  • Google Chrome -
    I feel a bit disappointed to post it, because it's also not a terribly great UI, and the Mozilla UI team is doing much more in terms of useful innovation (it just hasn't been released yet), but the browser UI landscape absolutely blows and Chrome stands out as best in class.

Some already mentioned which got my up-vote:

  • Textmate
  • Quicksilver
  • StackOverflow
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vote up 179 vote down

GMail

It totally changed the way I think about email, tagging and searching. We're forced to use Outlook at work -- I used to think it's the cat's whiskers but GMail has spoiled me.

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I think that the lack of folders in GMail is one of its major advantages. There is something incredibly liberting about not having to THINK about what folder to file an email away in, and just file it away knowing that you have the power of google search at your fingertips later to find the email. – LeopardSkinPillBoxHat Oct 27 '08 at 0:33
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Every search is a wild card search – TrickyNixon Oct 27 '08 at 20:49
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I love Gmail, tje UI is great, easy, simple end keyboard shortcuts rule (also i love the filters) – Pim Jager Nov 12 '08 at 16:02
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The lack of folders is a feature, not a bug. Tags are far more powerful. – Adam Lassek Nov 14 '08 at 22:19
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I find the best UI is one that works and is so intuitive and unobtrusive that it's invisible. Two examples that aren't software related:

  • I had some friends over for dinner and asked one to help set the table. He commented, Hey, I just realized I didn't need to ask where anything is--you put everything where I would have put it!"

  • Several companies make multi-function pens: pens with several different colors of ink, and perhaps a pencil, within the barrel. Bic's answer is a big honkin' plastic behemoth with 4 colored plungers at the top, one for each color. They tend to stick and jam; mine have all been euthanized. Zebra has a pen/pencil combination: twist the barrel clockwise for the pen, counter-clockwise for the pencil. Rotring (and some cheaper knock-offs) have a single plunger and four colored dots spaced around the top of the barrel. You select a color by holding the pen horizontally with the corresponding dot facing up, so you can see it. Press the plunger, and gravity (or magic) selects that color for you.

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Cutlery will be in the top drawer. This is one of the laws of the universe. – Ted Percival Jul 10 at 23:28
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Lotus Notes

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I should click offensive instead of down.... – Aardvark Oct 26 '08 at 19:44
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Sorry guys, I was being sarcastic. I don't think I know anyone who likes Lotus Notes. – Jack Leow Oct 30 '08 at 10:54
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textmate/e

The two easiest to use yet most powerful editors I've ever seen.

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vote up 84 vote down

Mac OS X. Love Apple or hate them, you have to admit that they've got the edge when it comes to UI design.

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I don't have to admit anything. – TrickyNixon Oct 26 '08 at 17:03
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They haven't got the edge when it comes to UI design. Many things they did are so plain wrong - see Interface Hall Of Shame for an interesting story about at least one Apple product. – OregonGhost Oct 26 '08 at 17:17
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I'd rather see people voting my post up and down than having the comments turn into a OS flame fest. If you agree with me, vote me up. If you disagree vote me down. It's that simple. – Jason Baker Oct 26 '08 at 19:44
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It would be difficult to deny that they've got the edge in your opinion. – Daniel Cassidy Nov 14 '08 at 15:05
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Agreed, Apple is superior in UI design. Period. – miccet Mar 26 at 11:00
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vote up 180 vote down

I know that this is controversial. But I really like the new UI of Office 2007, especially the Office Ribbon Bar.

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+1, it stays out of your way more often – sixlettervariables Oct 26 '08 at 17:29
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What's great about the ribbon is that, unlike a mindless maze of menus, it makes sense. It tough to learn if you're used to clicking on a particular menu to get something, but if you stop and think about where it ought to be, that's where you'll find it on the ribbon. – rwmnau Jan 2 '09 at 3:25
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+1 Best thing to come out of microsoft in ages. – waquin Feb 20 at 2:15
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-1. I frickin hate the office 2007 ribbon. – Kevin Feb 20 at 22:34
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My favorite is that it's designed to train you to use keyboard sequences. Try tapping <alt> and check out the overlays. – Eclipse Apr 1 at 17:30
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Firebug

just one among many features - Now you see it, now you don't!

Often, the solution to a problem can be found just by disabling a few CSS properties and seeing what the world looks like without them. As you mouse over each property, you'll see a little circular icon on the left. Clicking that will disable the property, and clicking it again will turn it back on.

alt text

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Firebug is a lot of awesome things, but a good UI isn't one of them, in my opinion. It would get my vote if they were to vastly improve keyboard support and add a clear UI for adding CSS rules and DOM attributes. – eyelidlessness Oct 26 '08 at 17:14
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It has room for improvement, but the style/layout and net tabs are just beautiful UI – annakata Jan 12 at 11:13
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Although firebug is an invaluable tool, what makes it so great in the context of this question is just how obvious it is. everything it does is available from a half-dozen tabs, and how to use each is, well, click on it. – TokenMacGuy Feb 20 at 3:49
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