What are the modern design trends you hate most?
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Because many of the frameworks, including Angular and React, were getting started while HTML and JS specs and the support of those specs were a giant hodgepodge MESS.
Why are so many things divs instead of standard components? Because for WAY too long, those components weren't standard. Some browsers didn't even fully support basic components or styling options that had been standard for years.
Why is everything a div? Because in many browsers, divs got the most feature support.
The frameworks seem nonsensical and dumb because they're covering up a LOT of even worse things.
Not to say a ton of nasty things cannot remain, or new gross things crop up, but at least this one has a history that's more interesting than, "they designed it poirly". Nope, a lot of the problems have no design at all, or might've been worse with a more "standard" implementation!
Tables and select boxes have been standard for ages across all browsers what are you on about.
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Oh you sweet summer child, thinking that will apply to most websites.
Tthis setting is not intended to apply to websites. With this setting you can change whether the date is shown as absolute (dd.mm.yyyy) oder relative (today, yesterday,...) for your own files on your computer.
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Sounds like an easier job for the landlord/owner, not having to manage coins and exchange.
Wouldn't be surprised if the landlord/owner gets a percentage, as well.
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I recently installed NoScript, and it's truly eye-opening the number of pages that "require" JS just to show me a page that has literally no reason to require JS. It's abysmal.
Long-time NoScript user. I only allow scripts to run that actually need to run, and some I forever-block everywhere just on principle (looking at you Google). Except for sites like banking, if a site won't run without garbage javascript it's quite easy to just go elsewhere where the signal-to-noise ratio is smarter.
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Wouldn't be surprised if the landlord/owner gets a percentage, as well.
Of course the landlord gets a percentage. They are essentially leasing the space to the company that manages the laundry equipment.
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They didn't say, "I have no idea why", they said it's soulless and annoying. Capitalism truly produces garbage. It doesn't matter that there is a reason for bad decisions. They're still bad decisions.
I didn't say "It's not a bad decision because there's a reason".
I shared that because I found it interesting myself and thought that others might too. -
I would like to change the radio station in a school zone and not run over a bunch of kids because I had to take my eyes off the road. Touchscreens are more distracting to use than my phone, which I don't like to use while driving because it is distracting enough.
Touchscreens absolutely do not belong in cars and I hope my car with buttons doesn't fucking die before the trend dies.
I agree. My car a Mercedes A200d from 2020 is a bit of a hybrid, it has a touch screen but also button controls to change things, but even those are a bit fiddly.
I love that it had a voice control feature that actually works so no I just press a button on the steering wheel and say “play classic fm” and it changes. Good for using navigation too as the less time you are using the screen the better.
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Material design. Everything must be so flat that you cannot see if it’s a button or just something highlighted.
Exactly, I can't believe we are still in this since years, can't wait for the next trend hoping it won't get worse..
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Long-time NoScript user. I only allow scripts to run that actually need to run, and some I forever-block everywhere just on principle (looking at you Google). Except for sites like banking, if a site won't run without garbage javascript it's quite easy to just go elsewhere where the signal-to-noise ratio is smarter.
Oh yeah. I generally don't touch it if a site is generally okay without it. I've just come across lots of sites that will only display an error message unless I allow JS.
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Tthis setting is not intended to apply to websites. With this setting you can change whether the date is shown as absolute (dd.mm.yyyy) oder relative (today, yesterday,...) for your own files on your computer.
The main post is asking about general design patterns, and many others have commented about relative dates in gitlab and many other online sources.
It is precisely my point to say that the settings cited here are local only.
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Tables and select boxes have been standard for ages across all browsers what are you on about.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]I'm talking about pre-HTML5. Back when a lot of non-web devs hated JacaScript. Back when people liked ActiveX. Back when CSS wasn't universally supported. If you're too young to remember those days, count yourself lucky.