Rancher Desktop Design - About #689
Replies: 3 comments 5 replies
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I would prefer to rename it to "Welcome" and leave it at the top. Whenever RD terminates, it should store both the current version, and the currently active page in settings. When you start RD, it compares the now current version against the stored version. If they are different, the starting page should be "Welcome". Otherwise it should be the same page that was shown when the app was closed. This gives us a nice and friendly welcoming page, that the user is revisiting after each app update, so we can show the newly available features, or whatever else we may need to point out. But during regular work, the "current" tab is maintained during app restarts, so the "Welcome" page doesn't get in the way. Comment copied from #683 (comment) |
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RD is neither a mobile nor a web app, so I'm not sure those "ease of access" rules apply here. An obvious counter-example is that "About App" is the top menu choice in each app menu: Even the material.io/design app shows "Introduction" at the coveted top left spot, instead of e.g. "Components", which the frequent user will refer to much more often. This should be the first screen that a new user sees (and the first screen you see after each upgrade), so putting it at the end just feels wrong. As a new user, I expect to go through the pages sequentially to set up the app the way I want it to work. Anyways, I do feel more strongly about showing the "About" or "Welcome" page again after each upgrade, and keeping the current page active across app restarts, then about the location. However, I would be strongly opposed to dynamically re-arranging the order of the pages based on usage patterns, so that the most used page floats to the top (as implied by "according to user importance"). Navigations must stay in a predictable place and not move around over time. |
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This was mentioned in other channels, but that large blue hero image looks very space-wasting. It's possible that this is an artifact of the sample images being of very large windows, though; I would not expect Rancher Desktop to be often maximized, as people are not likely to be using it exclusively / immersed for long periods (they're much more likely to be living in their editors, browsers, or command line). I assume some of our users would be using 13 inch or so laptops, on a train (or wherever external monitors are impractical), hacking along as they commute. At 16:9 that's ~11" wide, or ~ 70em (very roughly at 12pt — this assume 1 css inch = 1 physical inch). |
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