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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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124 Answers

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TextPad! I have been using it for years. I can always count on TextPad for any language and any file type. It does exactly what it was made to do.

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Twitter

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Good for posting, but I find it tedious to scroll down trying to find the last message I read so I can then read bottom-to-top to get things in chronological order (and make sense of those illegal multi-post messages). Something like mIRC's option to draw a horizontal line at the last message you read would be an improvement. – Ted Percival Jul 10 at 23:21
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I find it pretty annoying that you have to keep clicking "more" to read 20 more messages each time. AFAIK there's no simple way to get a long list of tweets, nor any pagination. What if I want to read someone's tweet from weeks/months ago? I might end up overloading my browser with thousands of messages on one page. – DisgruntledGoat Oct 20 at 19:29
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For old school people: PC Tools Deluxe (MS-DOS)

I found this UI amazing in a MS-DOS environment.

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When messing around with paint.net I found a really cool feature of the UI, the exit without saving dialogue:

alt text

These kind of dialogues usually only take up a small part of the screen however they block you from clicking anywhere else, so why use normal size buttons? Love it!

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I think a better UI would exit without the annoying dialog, automagically saving your changes in such a way you can recover them later if you exited accidentally. Just popping up a me-too "unsaved changes" dialog does not a great UI make. – Bryan Oakley Mar 26 at 13:45
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Actually, this dialog is one of the reasons I hate Paint.net. I HATE dialogs that make me have to read the items each time it displays. Vista is TERRIBLE for this -- overwriting a file requires me to read a 100 word essay for each entry before I can figure out which button to push. This dialog would have been MUCH more useful had it been just 'Save', 'Don't save' and 'Cancel', and then use tooltips for the descriptive text. I don't need to read this text each time this dialog appears. – Darren Ford Jul 30 at 13:29
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Darren does have a point. Perhaps what we need is a global OS level setting for 'Safety' or 'Do exactly as I say' – John MacIntyre Aug 27 at 17:29
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Lotus Magellan

It made the most of old hardware, a toy operating system, and a text console. It allowed you to access the full power of the software without needing to take a hand off the keyboard, but still in a more intuitive fashion than command line programs. To top it off, it could find and display (sometimes even edit) any file, quicker than any of my current computers with tools like Spotlight and Quicklook and Quicksilver on OS X or Google Desktop. I didn't completely abandon it until after I moved to Windows XP. When I used it under DOS, it entirely replaced the command line.

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Psion Series 5 PDA

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Half-Life Weapon Selector

  • Easy to visualize the weapons in your arsenal and much easier to find a particular weapon when you don't remember its number.
  • Only 7 weapon number/slots were needed instead of the usual 10, which really helps when I want to bind other keys for weapon selection.
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Adobe Lightroom

Before I tried Lightroom, I always had Adobe has a company that can't make a friendly UI. Photoshop is good once you know it, but getting to that point is really hard.

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I think facebook has one of the most usable sites around.

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VirtualBox

Just about every option is there in the right place where you'd expect it. Everything is easily reachable, but interface is not crowded. Maybe it isn't the best VM solution out there, but UI is perfect.

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I really like Amarok 1.4.x's UI design. Everything is where I need it to be and where it logically makes sense to find things. Context menus have features you need and avoids a lot of repetitive actions.

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I think there are way too many geeks here :)

No one mentioned Lightroom for example. (by Adobe)

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Automatic Teller Machines where I can get done what I need to do in a quick efficient way would be the best since I can get money out of my account when done.

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Instant Eyedropper

Drag it out of your system tray; when you release the mouse button, it picks up the colour under the cursor and copies its hex code (configurable) to the clipboard. It doesn't even have a UI in the conventional sense - but I absolutely love the way I interact with it to get my job done.

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Visual Studio 2008 with Resharper

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Newtek Lightwave 3D - when it comes to 3D editing, having non-intuitive icons is a pita so the mostly pure-text buttons sectioned by both position and a few carefully chosen colors makes it easy to hunt down a specific function and then remember the hotkey. Also, the main hotkeys are used without qualifiers which greatly speeds up the workflow (hitting a or x instead of alt+a or ctrl+x for instance). And, it also looks great, unlike most other major 3D packages, though that's just icing on the cake and not actually relevant, real fullscreen mode included ^^

The lack of full-color-icons and other color clutter puts the actual content in focus instead of the UI. Looking at the Cinema 4D shot (great package btw) the colorful and abundance of different looking UI elements seems to scream "look at me!" more than the actual content which to me is the wrong way to go.

Using a non-standard UI might be questionable but half of the reason for that is that it looks and works exactly the same regardless of platform (Windows, Mac OS).

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uTorrent - nice and simple

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Not to mention, the EXE file is small. – thenonhacker Jan 12 at 11:07
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Transmission is simpler. ;) – DisgruntledGoat Oct 20 at 19:21
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Microsoft/Windows Update website deserves credit, too! Before this website was invented, you would have to manually scour for updates and drivers on the internet. Windows Update solved this big problem by providing the one place to get all the updates you need.

And it's easy to use, just let is scan for updates, pick the ones you want, and install.

  • You don't have to specify you Windows version.
  • You don't have to deal about which update should be installed first, your selections will be validated.
  • You don't have to run each update manually!
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Well, I'd have to say that apt-get/synaptic is FAR superior to Windows Update in respect of those points - resolves dependencies silently and allows installation of new software at the click of a button. – Alistair Knock Mar 26 at 12:54
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Of all the Texas Hold'Em Poker Odds Calculators, this one is best (it's a Flash App):

PokerNews.com Poker Odds Calculator (Small Version)

PokerNews.com Poker Odds Calculator (Big Version)

Advantages:

  • All you have to do is click the cards to define the input.
  • Click the card on your hand or the table will remove it.
  • The deck cards will update with green tints indicating your advantage cards. More green cards means a bigger chance of winning.
  • More Red tints means you should fold the hand.
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One thing that blew me away lately was Photosynth by (surprisingly) Microsoft. It requires installation of Silverlight2, but it offers two amazing things:

  1. The guys at Live Labs used what they now call Deep Zoom (formerly known as SeaDragon), which I encourage everyone to read about, and watch the demos online. This is truly an awesome new technology, that has the potential to revolutionize the way pictures are shared on the web.
  2. The ability to fly freely through a 3D point model of the photographed object/location, created automatically from the supplied photos, is really incredible in some models, even though currently it's a keyboard only feature (I believe they're working on it).

Another application UI that I like is that of the virtual globes, Google Earth and Microsoft's Virtual Earth. Both are excellent, intuitive and practical, especially if you have the right hardware.

Yuval =8-)

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Picasa UI. Never seen something like that yet, it's intuitive, beautiful, fast, responsive. A wonderful example of UI even if it lacks in OS UI integration.

As an application, in some cases it sucks, but hey... no one is perfect.

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I like Sony's XMB used on PSP, PS3, and other Sony products. It's simple, intuitive, and pretty.

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GNU Emacs. When I'm in the zone, I am able to manipulate it as fast as I can think.

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I really like the UI of stackoverflow.com

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I think Facebook should be mentioned as a really good Web 2.0 UI. I'd say it is probably better than Gmail, just because it has more responsibilities than Gmail.

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I'd say the column view in Mac OS X Finder, once you understand how to operate it with the keyboard, is a fantastic way to browse files. Probably hasn't changed much since the NeXT days.

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I use Linux but Office 2007 is the best I've seen for 'easy and good looking UI'

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It took exactly 2 hours to my wife and his boss to find out how to save the document. And I don't think they're dumb :). A pretty UI is something that anybody can quickly use and that makes you productive quickly. Office 2007 is not UI friendly to me. – Olivier Pons Jun 4 at 21:20
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@Oliver: your wife is male? – DisgruntledGoat Oct 20 at 19:31
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vim deserves a mention. Horribly unfriendly to new users, really nasty learning curve, not particularly discoverable, but once I was familiar with it it was really productive.

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"unintuitive" doesn't necessarily equate with "bad UI". Sometimes it's quite the opposite, and I think vi is a good example of that. vi is all about productivity (or so I've heard, I'm actually an emacs guy :-), and the best Uis are the ones that make you the most productive. – Bryan Oakley Mar 26 at 13:54
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It is a bad ui, although it's a really good editor, but the ui is horrible. – hasen j May 28 at 21:26
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XBOX Live. Very user-friendly and intuitive.

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  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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