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2008-09-27
, 14:04
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Posts: 236 |
Thanked: 149 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ Finland
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#11
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2008-09-27
, 15:55
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Posts: 861 |
Thanked: 734 times |
Joined on Jan 2008
@ Nomadic
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#12
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2008-09-27
, 17:38
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Posts: 1,878 |
Thanked: 646 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ San Jose, CA
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#13
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2008-09-27
, 17:43
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Posts: 566 |
Thanked: 150 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#14
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2008-09-28
, 11:35
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Posts: 2,802 |
Thanked: 4,491 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#15
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In general, for a finger touch UI the value of the d-pad is much reduced. Finger touch UI gives scrolling directly from the screen, and it does not really rely on the style of having a focus which the user moves around to select items.
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2008-09-28
, 14:23
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Posts: 14 |
Thanked: 4 times |
Joined on Sep 2008
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#16
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2008-09-28
, 14:34
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Posts: 3,841 |
Thanked: 1,079 times |
Joined on Nov 2006
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#17
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2008-09-28
, 15:58
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Posts: 566 |
Thanked: 150 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
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#18
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Agreed. It's way too limiting to think of just simple scrolling, as in moving the page around with a finger. The D-pad can do much more than that.
Take just a simple thing as paging down page-by-page with a D-pad: say you want to go _exactly_ two pages back: Press 'up' on the pad twice, and you're there. You don't even have to watch the display. Can't do that with finger scrolling.
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2008-09-28
, 16:13
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Posts: 3,841 |
Thanked: 1,079 times |
Joined on Nov 2006
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#19
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2008-09-28
, 16:21
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Posts: 631 |
Thanked: 1,123 times |
Joined on Sep 2005
@ Helsinki
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#20
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You can, but to me that's a poor substitute for a real button, and it needs software support. Besides, that was just one example. What I'm trying to say is that it's not a good idea by the designers to think that they know the use cases.