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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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Yea, I thought the nipple quote was cleaver until my son was born. A much better sentiment would be, "Nothing is intuitive, even nipples." – Christopher W. Allen-Poole Oct 15 at 18:35
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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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123 Answers

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Microsoft Word for DOS

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Dropbox

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Winamp 3.

I miss the days of the simple music players.

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Amarok 1 (haven't tried 2 until now). I just love load thousands of songs, simply searching through the quick search bar. A multitude of customizable desktop wide hotkeys.

http://amarok.kde.org/

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Firebug (Firefox Plugin) is really a great tool for a web developer to have.
Netbeans brought the fun back in building Swing GUIs in Java. Currently my top IDE for Java development
2Advanced.com - Their website is one of the coolest I've seen...

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Opera browser.

I use it for ages, probably since version 5. It was probably the first browser with such a great UI improvements as mouse gestures, tabbed browser, speed dial pane, wand-like parssword saving, built-in adblock and RSS reader. Now all others are copying it.

You can use skins and rearrange panes as you want (I prefer tabs with pages on the right). You can turn off displaying images, styles and adjust page the window width by a click.

The nice thing is you get just by installing single <10mb file. And it works!

--- warning, subjective content ---

Sure, there is Firefox, which is far more popular and has milions of great plug-ins (Opera sucks badly here, especially dragonfly is far worse than firebug). You can get much more functionality via plugins. But then, it's not firefox but plugins :)

Very important thing is speed. Opera is one of the fastests on the market. But when you open more than 80 pages, it still works fast (and uses 550MB RAM). Firefox starts to choke at ~40. It's specific case, but I rarely have less than 20 pages open. A bad habit maybe? :)

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I'm a big Opera fan but I disagree with this answer. Some of the things you mentioned are good - the RSS reader is the best I've seen apart from Google Reader (which is good once you've got rid of all the "sharing" crap). However, the default look on installation is horribly cluttered. You got the stupid rewind/fastforward buttons and many other buttons that don't add much (though the "closed tabs" trash can is great). – DisgruntledGoat Oct 20 at 19:42
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I love Mac OS X and all of Apple's applications. Apart from that, my favourite application as of writing is Versions. Its icons are beautiful, its interface is laid out nicely, and it makes working with Subversion much easier!

(You can see screenshots of Versions on their website.)

Steve

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windows 7 - the new taskbar is so awesome. the win-left and win-right combinations. life is much easier now

zune - the ui is pretty and does what its supposed to do

onenote - not so much for the ui but for the features it offers

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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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  • 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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If you got a tablet try out Autodesk Sketchbook sometimes .

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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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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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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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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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For old school people: PC Tools Deluxe (MS-DOS)

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

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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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Delicious Library 2, a Mac software for cataloging books, movies, music, software, video games etc, written by Wil Shipley. It won several Apple Design awards.

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Boxee is a media center with a great UI. It's different that most media centers UIs I've experienced, but it remains intuitive and fun.

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OK, a few 3d packages have been mentioned so far, but I have to give respect to SolidWorks. I'd struggled with a lot of different 3d packages in terms of modelling exactly what I wanted without having to do endless eyeballing of positions and unnecessary tweaking of vertices. I had an idea of how the interface to a 3d modeller should work. When I discovered SolidWorks I was overjoyed - it works exactly how I wanted it to work.

SolidWorks has a user interface that makes something very complex (3d solid CAD and 2d drafting) only as complex as it needs to be for the job in hand. Someone else mentioned Sketchup - well imagine Sketchup's simplicity but with the ability to make much more models with multiple moving parts, complex curvatures, etc. And it retains construction history so you can always go back and change stuff - the biggest problem with most 3d software.

Of course it is a CAD package rather than a general 3d modeller, so it's a big apples-to-oranges to compare it with Maya/3ds/Cinema4d etc., but I really wish other packages incorporated SolidWorks-style building for non-organic modelling. Houdini has the power, but has the user interface from hell.

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Not sure, but gmail is very good IMHO. Also the iPhone has a great UI.. and some (lesser known) native OSX applications, such as Omni Graffle (best UI for a chart drawing tool) or pixelmator (photoshop clone).

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PuTTY

It's pretty simple UI, but effective, and I use it throughout the day.

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I think the UI in "The Sims" is pretty darn good. I like, for instance, how they make use of pie menus. I don't play it much myself but my daughter started playing when she was around 9 and can work it like a pro. I never once have heard her say something like "it's really stupid that you have to ..." or "I wish it were easier to ...".

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DrWatson

Simple UI, you do nothing wrong, and I like the message when you just run: DrWatson

You're fine

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It must be blu !! it is just a twitter client(WPF) but it is fun to use

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Most anything that follows the GNOME Human Interface Guidelines is simply a pleasure.

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Autocad hands down.

I've used it all the way back to the dos version and the power users use a command line system. In particular the right click mouse button can be bound to the enter key so that your left hand didn't have to move back and forth across the keyboard so much as you enter in command aliases and dimensions.

It's not uncommon of for users to do 30 commands a minute with it. You can really throw down the lines with it.

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GNOMEDO!!!!

http://do.davebsd.com/

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IPhone. It is complex yet powerful. A person out of his/her mind can easily use it and you have to be a genius to misuse it. Apple did a great job on the IPhone.

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Mac OSX -> System Preferences

Mac OSX - System Preferences

Compare that too...

Windows Control Panel

Windows...helps you too go to "Classic view" as they believe the new UI is not friendly enough...

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