Entry tags:
Browser UI
A usability question for you all: of the four following layouts, which of the following positions for the address bar in a web browser is the best? Apologies for the quality of the screenshots - I hacked together the bare minimum of a VB program needed to make these.
[Poll #1427428]
It's interesting that the major browsers use very different layouts. Internet Explorer 7 and 8 both use layout 1, while Firefox and IE6 are closest to layout 3 (ignoring the lack of built-in tabs in IE6). Opera uses layout 4, while Chrome doesn't really fit into any of these (though it's most like 4).
[Poll #1427428]
It's interesting that the major browsers use very different layouts. Internet Explorer 7 and 8 both use layout 1, while Firefox and IE6 are closest to layout 3 (ignoring the lack of built-in tabs in IE6). Opera uses layout 4, while Chrome doesn't really fit into any of these (though it's most like 4).

no subject
no subject
My ideal browser would be the latest Internet Explorer or Opera rendering engine, combined with the Internet Explorer 6 interface and system integration and with support for multiple distinct sessions that share bookmarks/history/persistent cookies. The latter is something that I've only ever seen in IE, and is incredibly useful when you want to do two separate queries on a session-based site (e.g. the National Rail journey planner).
no subject
It's true: I was really fond of IE6 in 2005 - and I thought of it as my main browser. It's fast, and it's clean. There was no extraneous stuff in the toolbar; it was just a browser. But working on multi-tab sessions became really difficult, because each "tab" was actually a window on the taskbar. So I switched to Opera.
And I guess it was then that I redefined "Interface" to include control over most aspects of the browsing: Tabs, Gestures, Easy Page Switching, and Zooming. Yes: I still keep a minimal UI (Back & Forward Buttons, Reload, Address Bar, Zoom, and View Button - no "Home", no Search or Favourites or History buttons because they can be accessed with a shortcut; but I'm addicted and dependent on Gestures and tabs with MRU.
no subject
You make a good point about the interface, Opera is definetely more customisable that IE6 and has
actually useful shinyness. I've not used the gestures, but I do like its tab ordering system and the single-key shortcuts. If it weren't for the multi-process issue and a couple of bugs, I would have likely switched to Opera by now.
I was thinking also of system integration as a whole when I said IE6. I have an address bar to the bottom of my screen (to get it right-click on the taskbar, Toolbars, Address... except Microsoft partially removed it in a service pack because some regulator didn't like it - that's another rant), and it behaves like a cross between the IE address bar and the Run dialog. The integration is excellent - I can type in a website, a folder on my computer, a network share, a program, a file, the name of a favourite, or a search keyword, and it all works with full auto-complete and launches the right thing. On the one hand, that kind of integration is monopolistic... on the other hand, it's incredibly useful (and I believe it will launch the default browser, so if you've set Opera as the default it'll use that).
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I don't know about Firefox.