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anton-c | 7 months ago
I've found that in the creative work I do, lots of things moved away from skeuomorphism too far. Yes it's easier to read the text on a flat black background with all the controls in a grid. but you lose some intuition compared to when it actually resembled a hardware unit that has logical places for things.
I'm in the market for a new vehicle so I'm particular interested in that last line: which companies are bringing back physical controls in cars?
bovermyer|7 months ago
I have a feeling I will need to settle for finding and restoring a car from before 1990.
JohnFen|7 months ago
You don't have to go back that far. I'm with you, I'm actively repulsed by newer cars because (in part) of the touch screens and other such nonsense, so I expect that I'll never be buying a car that was manufactured too recently.
But my current car is acceptable, and it was made it 2008.
thfuran|7 months ago
atonse|7 months ago
thesimp|7 months ago
A flat touchscreen in a car is something that is now used in anything from a base Fiat Panda to the most expensive Mercedes S class. And it all looks cheap because visually there is little visual difference between that and a 25,- dollar AliExpress tablet.
At some point in time the luxury car brands must be getting this feedback from their customers.
KoboldAdvocate|7 months ago
int_19h|7 months ago
Win95 was very much not skeuomorphic, but it had very strong visual cues in UI even so.
adastra22|7 months ago