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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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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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  • Memory resident text editor Sidekick. Back in the nineties.
  • DOS.
  • Turbo Pascal.
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XBOX Live. Very user-friendly and intuitive.

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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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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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I think there are way too many geeks here :)

No one mentioned Lightroom for example. (by Adobe)

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Psion Series 5 PDA

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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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I'm utterly shocked at the horrendous interfaces that have floated to the top of this question. Just shocked.

but to answer the question, the best interface I've used is at http://zoomii.com

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Recently I've enjoyed Shelfari and Reddit. For desktop apps, Rhapsody is pretty nice.

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Navicat for MySQL. Hands-down, easily one of the best MySQL administration tools.

Simple, straight to the point, and clean-cut to boot.

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Microsoft Expression Blend (and the other apps from this pack but I use Blend the most). It has nice, simple UI, you can search for properties you want, you can change size of tabs, etc.:

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ReSharper.

One that made doing your task a pleasure...was perfectly designed for the task...facilitated doing it with ease...made you want to locate the creators...personally fly to their location, and then hand them large pile of money.

Not sure about the "large" pile of money, but I'm real happy to pay for such an excellent experience!

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I'm going to have to say Enso. I think that is the application that increased my productivity the most. It's simple and unobtrusive. I can search google, launch applications, and spell check text using with using the mouse very little or not at all.

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The Apple iigs -- and if I had to pick a specific app for it, probably Symbolix, because it was both so powerful and discoverable.

For cheaper than a Mac, you got a UI that was almost identical (and in color!), but the whole system was more hackable, both in hardware (tons of expansion ports), and software (Unix-like command shells).

People rave about Mac OS X today, which is a pretty nice system, but still lacks the consistency that the classic Mac and GS/OS had. I hear Mac people debate about "in app $FOO you can drag the $BLARG to move a window, but in app $BAR you have to drag the $ZLEFFLE" today, which seem like exactly the kinds of inconsistencies Apple users used to nag Windows 3.1 users about.

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Bar none, all other a joke in comparison, Cubase VST +..

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I can't believe that no one even mentioned SSMS (SQL Server Management Studio) yet. WHo needs more of a UI when you can type your own queries directly in de UI

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New friendfeed.com has a very neat and useful UI

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MacBook Air, the hardware design, the feel, the OS, cuts way above the rest! :)

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Of any application I have used in the last 28 years: BBEdit from Bare Bones Software.

It is simple to use in the beginning and discovering more advanced features is very intuitive.

Studying the user interface of BBEdit is recommended for anyone designing a user interface on any platform.

At least that is how it was when I used Macintosh'es (1993- 1997). Apparently it also runs on Mac OS X.

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Less is more: WriteMonkey

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When Mackie Tracktion got released it came with this advertising:

Tracktion is a radical new type of music production software - giving you a clean, intuitive, and clutter-free interface without losing the features you find in software costing much more.

If you like your software to use dozens of overlapping windows, Tracktion is not for you. It won't pretend to be a mixing desk or show you panels with pictures of screws that are accurately copied from a real piece of hardware. There is no Windows clutter, nor obscure menus full of commands that you'll never use. In short, Tracktion is a little bit different. It's a continuously evolving product with new features and updates regularly released. Most people who've used a sequencer before can get to grips with Tracktion in about 10 minutes, and once you've grasped a handful of basic concepts (which aren't exactly rocket-science), the learning curve practically disappears.

And IMHO they promised not too much! I love to use it and don't wanna use Cubase or Logic again.

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Claris Works on System 7 was the first GUI application that I learned to use. It certainly set a high standard for future apps to live up to.

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Does anyone else remember Interleaf? One of the original desktop publishing programs (it predated Sun Windows), it had its own windowing system and was organized optimally for a print shop. Clumsy for content generating/editing users, but very intuitive for production work.

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My own app, TheKBase. This is not because it has a good UI, but every time I want it to do something, I just open up the code and hack away.

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I saw a detailed post here by Abhishek Parolkar http://l.whol.ly/tzgrh , Its about their realistic observations on signup process

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I love the Windows Vista (and now Windows 7) control panel. It's a great user interface, because whatever task you want to do you can just type a few words of it in to the search box and the control panel will quickly direct to the proper place for doing that task.

It's better than the control panels in older versions of Windows where you had to remember Microsoft's arbitrary groupings of settings and look for the right little icon to click on.

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For me it has to be Windows 7. I have been working with Windows since 3.1 and this is the first one that I thought: Finally a good, well thought through product. When you turn off Aero and most effects, you get a stylish, fast interface with a ton of small, user-friendly things you find out you have wished for all the time. That every location is searchable - even the control panel. That it tells you which program is blocking the file you can't delete. The well-designed, humanly understandable screen that explains to you why you can't shut down yet (instead of a cascade of grey windows that scare the shit out of unexperienced users). And a lot more things like that. I find working with Windows to be really fun now, for the first time ever.

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Battery 3 audio sampler. I like a lot of the native instruments GUIs but Battery is my favorite because of the sheer simplicity of it.

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

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