I believe Flat UI was the invention of Albert Shum (as reported by CNET at the time, he came up with Windows Phone Metro UI). You can see his articles here: https://medium.com/@alshumdesign
> "nah.. that looks terrible and we aren't going to be cohesive, so lets do our own thing over here."
I wish this were the case. Instead all Microsoft products have switched to the ugly Flat UI, including Word, PowerPoint, Excel, etc.
The thing is, flat UI worked really well on the phone, which it was designed for.
It's just that some idiot manager came up with the "unified experience" idea and shoved that shit onto desktop Windows without any time for polish.
Ironically I think pretty much anyone's first experience with metro was Windows 8 on PC, which was such a disaster that people wouldn't even give Windows phone a try because it had the same UI that they learned to hate. Not to say this is the reason Windows Phone failed, but probably one of the many factors.
Windows Phone had the best UI of the three major phone operating systems, in my opinion. The Metro UI tile system is a great home screen system, and the layered swipe left/right process made a lot of sense.
At the same time, there are other people who like the newer UI style much more. I think it looks and functions better. These are matters of personal opinion, including the end judgments of whatever team created it.
the argument that the article brings forward is that flat design is harder to figure out because it lacks some of the real-world metaphors we associate with interaction ("things that look raised can be pushed down", "things that have depth can be filled")
has there been research done on whether these difficulties occur in all age groups? Because I can easily see this being an artifact of tradition.
People who don't use a lot of analog devices may be confused by a skeuomorphic interface, and may appreciate the simplicity of a flat design.
You are making the "digital natives don't need the crutch of physicality" argument.
Here's what tobiasandtobias had to say about that in their blog:
Even 'digital natives' live in the physical world. We start learning how it works before we ever touch a computer, and even the most dedicated nerd spends more time interacting with physical objects than with digital interfaces. It doesn't take additional learning to know that an object casting a shadow on another is in front of that other, for example. Failing to leverage that existing knowledge is tantamount to shutting down whole swathes of users' brains.
> "nah.. that looks terrible and we aren't going to be cohesive, so lets do our own thing over here."
I wish this were the case. Instead all Microsoft products have switched to the ugly Flat UI, including Word, PowerPoint, Excel, etc.