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BumpTop: Nice for anything...but my Desktop
Merlin Mann | Jun 23 2006
BumpTop Prototype - HoneyBrown.ca Don't get me wrong -- like apparently everyone this week, I think the BumpTop demo is right purty. The little interface widgets are beautiful and functional, and the physics of the motion seem realistic. It looks lovely. But would I ever, in a million years, seek this out as a Desktop replacement? You bet your butt I wouldn't, and I'll tell you why (as well as what it would be great for). See, here's the thing: once your computer (and your related world, writ large) has excellent indexing, search, and access via something like Quicksilver, this kind of "physical" interface metaphor starts seeming quaint, if not downright exhausting. I guess I just never find myself shuffling and re-organizing large numbers of files in a way that isn't more than satisfactorily addressed with sorting, Smart Folders, icon views, and searching. I throw stuff into the most general piles I can stand, then let Quicksilver and Spotlight do all the heavy lifting. Maybe that's me, but this seems like a recipe for non-stop fiddling. Having said that I can imagine several situations where I'd personally want to toss items into piles and use functionality similar to BumpTop.
But as an interface to my file and folder system? Meh. The metaphor of personal computer as physical space has been strained beyond usefulness, in my opinion. It's the lack of physicality that affords such insane productivity for Quicksilver users. Everything is abstracted into nouns and verbs and I get to mash them up however I need to. I'm unconstrained by "here" and "there." Maybe I'm not who this would be targeted at, but I think I could be if it were applied to almost anything except my Desktop's contents. What do you think? 48 Comments
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I think you make some...Submitted by Steve Ivy (not verified) on June 23, 2006 - 9:33am.
I think you make some great points, Merlin - this interface would be great within constrained, focused (perhaps "task-oriented") environments. Generic file management is too broad a category now for physicality to adequately represent the interactions. This is also why I can't get behind Siracusa or Gruber lementing the Finder's drift away from spatial metaphors. But managing my photos? Heck yeah. Also, when working on design layouts, when I need to be able to easily manage a relatively small set of assets. It would be insteresting to be able to rummage in a physical set of piles and then drag a group of images or assets into a Photoshop or InDesign window. Maybe what we need is the desktop recast as a workbench. You use your non-spatial Finder to Search, Find, and Organize files into projects/groups/whatever, when use the spatial workbench to » POSTED IN:
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