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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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blender3d has both the best and worst interface around.

Its worst for a simple reason. There's no way to learn it. There's no clear way to discover what the next step in your modeling process should be. If you figure out what you need to do next, there's no way to figure out where in its immense interface that is. Even if you know where it is, it is not always obvious how to use it. Your only hope is to spend several hours or days going through manuals and tutorials and screencasts.

That being said, it's actually very well thought out. It's based on the assumption that you will have one hand on the mouse and one on the keyboard. It places each tool very close to where you'll need it. Almost everything can be accessed from a few keystrokes combined with context menus. You can adjust the position of all the controls to suit your particular needs and environment, but they lock in place so they will always be where you expect them. There are very few floating windws, most tools are in a paneled view so nothing is ever in the way of what you're working on, but the few floating windows are used as overlays, augmenting the view, rather than obscuring it. Everything can be zoomed and panned, weather its the model your modifying, the button panels, menus, python scripts...

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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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Adobe Photoshop. Amazing.

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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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I feel like World Of Warcraft should be mentioned.

Simple, not too clunky and very customizable.

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  • 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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XBMC - for a community project it has such a low barrier to entry my child can run it with nary an issue

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The iPhone - As much as it's almost a cliché to say it now, it really has changed my expectations of UI's since i've owned one.

Everything you do on it is exactly how you would expect it to work and everything is where you would expect it to be.

And I think the key point is, it's simple.

I never understood the fuss about Apple until I owned an iPhone, now i'm a complete convert and would definitely buy other Apple products. So a great UI, to me anyway, is certainly one of the very best marketing tools for a company to encourage brand loyalty!

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

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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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flickr!

Flickr always behaves as expected, a very, if not THE most important feature in an UI.

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WASD + mouse :p

(Quake, Unreal Tournament and lots of others)

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3D Studio Max - very complex and friendly UI.

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

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iTunes.

I could never get my head around Media Player. Navigating around your music and pictures, etc, never seemed intuitive to me, whereas in iTunes, it does.

Also, a common feature I use is to play all my music on shuffle. In iTunes, it's at most 3 clicks away (select Music, turn on shuffle (if it's not already on), click play). In Media Player, that seemed to involved creating a new playlist containing all your music, which had to be updated if you added new music.

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vote up 4 vote down

Adobe Photoshop.

It succeeds not because of its tools and palettes (which are also excellent), but because it exposes such a successful metaphor for interacting with images: canvases, layers, channels, swatches, rulers, brushes, masks, filters, etc...

Using that central metaphor, the software provides a massively powerful set of image-processing tools, using concepts from real-world physical media that can be easily understood by artists and graphic designers.

I know of no other software that delivers such a powerful set of specialized tools, without becoming a nightmare of grids, tables, and checkboxes.

What's especially impressive to me is that they developed such a compelling metaphor almost twenty years ago, and as they've developed the software, they manage to fit all of the new features within the context of the existing metaphor.

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vote up 4 vote down

Really, no-one's mentioned SketchUp yet?

There are a lot of interfaces that are ‘good’: that do what we expect within their application field. UIs that have been whittled down by years of understanding the target domain. By now it's pretty standard for a text editor or a web browser to have a ‘good’ interface.

But SketchUp isn't merely ‘good’, it's exceptional. OK, it's hardly perfect, there are rough edges in many places, but it's light-years ahead of every other 3D modelling app.

Modelling is a fundamentally hard activity to provide a 2D UI for. Look at all the other modelling apps and you'll see a UI disaster area of ugly custom controls, endless grids of obscure icons, reliance on obscure keyboard interactions, and forums full of bewildered new users. SketchUp is different. Its smooth mix of direct-action and numeric input, and most of all its intelligent approach to ‘snapping’ makes for a modeller in which a beginner can just start dragging around lines and objects without thinking too much about it. It brings the ease and speed of a good 2D vector graphics package to 3D modelling, and that's an amazing feat.

OK, it's somewhat limited in regard to what kinds of curved surfaces you can have, and it certainly doesn't have all the enormous feature set of Blender or the other high-end modellers. But it is the only modeller an Average Person stands any chance of being able to actually use.

(Then Google made it free. Thank you, Mister Google Sir.)

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vote up 4 vote down

Enso

alt text

Enso is an application laucher that displays the progams to be lanched in a semi transparent interface. Pretty much closer to Launchy and to QuickSilver.

EDIT after eyelidlessness comment

Yes, Enso has this "feature" that I have not seen in any other interface ( well I do actually, but not in this way, keep reading ) .

This "feature" is also the most criticized aspect of the app.

To make Enso work, you have to:

  • press the caps lock key
  • then while holding it type the command you want
  • and then, when you release the caps lock key the command gets executed.

It is very odd the first time you do this.

I thought "I'm not going to use this application more than a day" but after that day, the "press and hold" became more and more natural. With time you don't realize anymore about the caps hold and it is something that comes very easily.

In fact, this behavior is also present in all the text editing "software" we use everyday, included SO answers ( this ), notepad, MS-Word, E-mail, etc. etc any text editor has it. It is the same thing we do to write uppercase characters.

When we want to write upper case characters most of us ( if not everyone ) do press and hold the "SHIFT" key and write the uppercase character we need.

When we don't need more uppercase characters we simply release the SHIFT key.

This is has become so natural, that we don't realize we do it anymore. This has become habitual.

The same happens with Enso capslock hold. After using it for a while it becomes habitual and you don't realize it's there, you just hold type and release and things happens.

After a couple of days using it, it is like if the interface disappear, which is very pleasant because it does not interrupt whatever you're doing, it does not break your train of thought at least not completely.

Is something strange, very nice, and the most controversial feature. I guess you have to experiment it your self.

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vote up 3 vote down

How about Notepad?

Probably doesn't get the credit it deserves but in my books its about as simple and easy to use as you can get.

WindowsXP's start menu ranks your most frequently used apps and my top two are Calc and Notepad....even Notepad++ is 4th....which has to say something about their usability since if they weren't good I wouldn't be going back to use them over and over again.

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IntelliJ IDEA

It packs an abundance of powerful features in a way that they are easily available but don't get in your way. (And if you are a hardcore power-user, you can make IDEA fly by making use of all sorts of shortcuts, live templates, intention actions, etc.) Takes care of the mundane and lets you focus on actual development work, the things that need human thinking.

When I first started using IDEA some 4 years ago as a junior developer, it was an eye-opening experience to see how good tools really make a difference.

Lots of details and screenshots here: http://www.jetbrains.com/idea/features/

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vote up 3 vote down

The GIMP, but just for two features:

  1. Remappable keyboard shortcuts.
  2. The scroll wheel.

Seriously, the scroll wheel can change your brush, change the color, zoom in and out, and of course scroll through the document, and instead of being based on clunky modifier keys, all you have to do to change the scroll wheel's function is to move the cursor around the screen.

As for the keyboard shortcuts, I've placed all the commonly used tools in one cluster of keys, so I can change tools with my left hand and draw with my right.

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vote up 2 vote down

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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vote up 2 vote down

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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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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vote up 2 vote down

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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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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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'd have to answer: The Book. The dead tree version. The interface is superior, does not need any power, works both indoor and outdoors, no user-training necessary. All controls are exactly where I expect them to be, regardless of which book I'm using at the moment.

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does not index, no full-text search, no easy backup solutions, does not operate in dark environment, not customizable, no updates – devio Mar 26 at 12:26
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Does not suffer from harddrive failures. Media guaranteed to be readable for hundreds of years. :-) – JesperE Mar 26 at 12:52
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