Can I jump in...?
I was going to try and read all 23 pages on this forum before I posted (so I was knowledgeable and wouldn't repeat), but it was started a couple of years ago (much could have changed since then) and, really, I'm too lazy. I'll try to keep up from here on out.
I did find something interesting in
http://i50.tinypic.com/2zjdg7p.png, so I did a forum search on the PNG and came up empty. I wanted to comment on the ... (ellipse). The ellipse and right arrow, on a menu, have a very specific meaning in Windows: the ellipse means that if this menu item is selected, you will get further interaction (non-committal); the right arrow means you will get a submenu when you point to this menu item. I'm a stickler for details like this and for some reason, even with my otherwise bad memory, I remember them. Anywho,
here is Microsoft's official documentation.
Now, a piece of trivial? Who developed and wrote the first GUI architectural standards? If your answer was the obvious Microsoft, you'd be surprised to know it was IBM, not Mr. Gates. Here is a
Wiki exert:
Wiki wrote:Common User Access (CUA) is a standard for user interfaces to operating systems and computer programs. It was developed by IBM and first published in 1987 as part of their Systems Application Architecture. Used originally in the OS/MVS, VM/CMS, OS/400, OS/2 and Microsoft Windows operating systems, parts of the CUA standard are now implemented in programs for other operating systems, including variants of Unix. It is also used by Java AWT and Swing.
Of course it was called CUA (Common User Access), not GUI (Windows wasn't around yet - it was a few years later when the GUI version of Excel was released, which was the basis for MS Windows). Graphic UI standards were also documented in this manual, though. I couldn't find a good link to the PDF, but I actually still have the original printed manual, as well as the IBM Bookshelf Library CDs (yea, OK, I'm a documentation pack-rat - you never know when they'll come in handy again! Just a few days after I finally threw out my printed EMACS books, I needed them).
One last comment on:
Don wrote:Now, as long as XY's "look and feel" is better than TC's "look and fear" I don't worry too much about the GUI.
All I can say is,
"DANGER WILL ROBINSON DANGER."