excited to see what this means for the project, the poor UI/UX of libreoffice is easily its most glaring flaw imo

  • IndieGoblin@lemmy.4d2.org
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    3 hours ago

    software engineer, team lead, and manager at Red Hat for more than 20 years.

    Please keep this man away from ui/ux. Nerds designing UI is how libre office got in this mess in the first place.

    • Fedditor385@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      He is not designing the UI, he will be implementing it.

      The UI and UX will stay bad as it is, just on a modern technology stack.

  • CarrotsHaveEars@lemmy.ml
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    2 hours ago

    Why do people keep saying “UI/UX”?

    UI is user interface.

    UX is user experience.

    One is to be developed (with code), and the other is to be designed (in Figma for instance). They have very little overlap!

  • warmaster@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Agreed, if you grew using another program, switching is hard unless it’s UX/UI is superb.

    When I ditched Adobe, Inkscape was a breeze. GIMP is hard AF and Krita a bit easier but it doesn’t have the features I need. I ended up using Photopea, and now I’ve tried Affinity and it’s the best Photoshop alternative I’ve tried yet.

    Collabora is looking pretty good so far. Still a few rough edges but easier than any other FOSS office software.

    • Da Oeuf@slrpnk.net
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      4 hours ago

      GIMP is well worth getting used to, especially now we are post 3.0 with a proper non-destructive workflow for filters/effects. I had always found it confusing to learn, having the Photoshop UI fossilised into my neural pathways, but what unlocked it for me was following an online GIMP course for 2/3 hours, which amounted to far less time than I had formerly spent cracking photoshop or working to pay for it.

      Some great plugins are coming out now too. The Batcher plugin in particular makes GIMP (and GMIC by extension) extremely powerful for automation.

      Good times.

    • sobchak@programming.dev
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      3 hours ago

      I think it’s ok for switching to be hard if the UI is built for productivity. I’m not really a “creative” worker in the most common sense, so I’m guessing GIMP’s UI sucks even after you learn it, but I do know VIM is not intuitive at all, yet improves productivity compared to most IDEs/text editors. I’ve also worked on an application, working closely with our somewhat technical users, and they would suggest UI changes that were often not intuitive, but increase their productivity a bit (less need for using a mouse, less keystrokes/clicks and stuff like that).

      • VoxAliorum@lemmy.ml
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        6 hours ago

        Inkscape was hell for me when I tried it years ago. I just had no clue where to find stuff and how to navigate properly. Maybe I have to give it another try.

        • Ardens@lemmy.ml
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          2 hours ago

          Says more about you than Inkscape. Seriously. It’s build like literally almost every other program out there. Tools to the left, menus at the top, navigation and other windows at the right. How can you not find stuff?

    • ghost_towels@sh.itjust.works
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      12 hours ago

      I love Inkscape, it’s so intuitive! I didn’t even need to read the docs. And now that Affinity is coming to Linux I’m hoping I can switch my work to these options.

  • freeman@feddit.org
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    15 hours ago

    Yes, I feel bad recommending LibreOffice to people who only used paid software, as the UI is quite a hurdle. Installing a theme and symbol-pack was the first thing I did, even before editing or writing something…

    • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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      3 hours ago

      Recommend OnlyOffice instead. It’s like LibreOffice but it doesn’t look like complete garbage and actually modern.

    • Darkenfolk@sh.itjust.works
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      12 hours ago

      I honestly fail to see what’s wrong with the UI? Sure, it’s not pretty but it is functional as it is.

        • Ardens@lemmy.ml
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          2 hours ago

          So, you compare classic menus in one of them with a ribbon menu in the other? Don’t you know how to compare? Do you also compare car speeds with one driving in reverse and the other i 5th gear?

      • Chloé 🥕@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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        12 hours ago

        it works, but it’s far from ideal. a lot of features are tucked away behind unintuitive context menus, and on some systems you need to do a bit of configuration for it to look right. for example, it uses bitmap icons by default, so if you use a hidpi screen the icons will look atrocious until you figure out how to switch them to vector icons.

        and an ugly UI is a problem by itself. it’s uninviting, unwelcoming. it gives a feeling of jank, of amateurism, and not in a good way. if you open the app for the first time and immediately think “this looks like it was last updated in 2003”, it’s not a good thing.

        • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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          9 hours ago

          are tucked away behind unintuitive context menus

          That are well documented and don’t change once you figure out where they are. “UX” is code for “we’ll rearrange everything you need twice a year and force you to constantly re-learn our app because fuck you.”

          if you open the app for the first time and immediately think “this looks like it was last updated in 2003”, it’s not a good thing

          Why not? To me it’s reassuring because it means the procedures I memorized years ago probably haven’t changed. It’s the same reason people like the command line so much. Office software UI is a solved problem and arguably peaked in 2003 before MS Office started adding all the bullshit, it doesn’t need to be updated every single year.

          • Chloé 🥕@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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            8 hours ago

            it works for you because you got accustomed to it. cool! genuinely! but not everyone is a power user, not everyone will want to sift through documentation to find out how to do the thing they want that’s easy to do with word

            from the non-techy people i’ve spoken to who’ve used libreoffice, they all agree that it’s worse than ms office because it gets in the way more. it’s harder to do stuff, because it’s less intuitive to them.

            people in 3d modeling use blender. people in audio production use audacity. people in office work and schools, usually, do not use libreoffice, because if you can afford ms office it’s just better for them. maybe that will change with office now being ai-infested webviews held together with gum, javascript and ever increasing subscription prices… then again, that hasn’t slowed down adobe

            imo the upcoming audacity 4 is an incredible example of open-source ui redesign, and should be an inspiration to everyone. the ui is sleeker, faster, easier to use, and yet it’s still familiar to existing users! but you can do good stuff without recreating the whole ui from scratch like they did, of course

  • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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    9 hours ago

    Boo. It’s one of the last GUI software without user infantilization syndrome. Go use Google Docs if you want your software to coddle you.

    I swear if LibreOffice starts talking to me like I’m a child like MS Office does or starts having animations that actively slow me down and spike my CPU usage just to open a menu or something.

    Also, I’ve noticed a pretty strong correlation between “modern UX” and instability in office software. I don’t think I’ve ever had LibreOffice crash on me, the last major UX revision of MS Office definitely crashed more often than LibreOffice, and the latest version of MS Office crashes at least once every time I have to use it taking my unsaved work with it even with autosave on. I don’t know what “experience” they’re aiming for but not crashing and causing data loss should probably be prioritized over making it look pretty.

    • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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      3 hours ago

      They can develop multiple UI’s. One for normal users and a classic one for people who like everything without a single menu bar or drop down menu to abstract the clutter away

    • axh@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      I understand that real men like you want their software to hit them in the face on start-up, and then refuse to do anything until you type SUDO, but LibreOffice UI isn’t even “good” kind of difficult. It’s not like Vim, where once you learn how to use it you become much more productive. LibreOffice is just a plain old mess. You start by selecting one of four UIs, where you need to guess which one actually works (I remember that a basic feature that I needed, after the extensive search, turned out to be unavailable in the UI that I selected at the start).

    • Joël de Bruijn@lemmy.ml
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      7 hours ago

      Maybe the “you never get a second chance for a first impression” is indeed unfair but it is hurdle for adoption.

      In my case my motivation to keep using and trying LibreOffice is driven by the hate for MS and not by the love for LO.

      For example: I went through some eye surgeries and really needed a dark mode. But I couldnt get a dark mode in which buttons still were cleary visible. Icons not showing well and hard to tell what they were for. Meaning I kept hoping the tooltips showed something usefull. But “reading” icons is a bit strange … I am sure if I search forums, git issues and documentation something usefull will turn up.

      And maybe its infantile like you said but I sure like contextual filled menubars since PaintshopPro in 2005. So whats with the empty menus showing a handfull buttons and everything else in some cornermenu? Seems like a waste of screen real estate.

      As for dataloss: sure my data wasnt lost but loading and pivoting a 90k row data table made Calc freeze and only restarted after killing it. 90k is not for everyone but it sure isnt a lot either in spreadsheet land.