February 16, 2012 @ 16:55
Google, I’m getting really tired of you.
The perceptive reader will note that some of the images in the G+ column at the
right there are now broken. I haven’t changed anything in the code, so it’s
definitely something on Google’s side.
I’m really tempted to just remove that entire G+ feed and be done with it, it’s
far more hassle than it’s worth.
I have a similar issue at work: I have been trying to get people to pick a
single calendar system, and since our email is done via gmail now, we figured
that Google Calendar is the answer. But of course, it’s almost perfect, yet
doesn’t do what we need (allow printing calendars with a custom template to add
our company logo and contact info), and thus is almost completely useless to us.
I submitted a bug for the Google Data Python API today too, apparently
you can’t actually delete calendars
without it throwing an exception. Nice.
The problem
Google has been revamping all of their user interfaces lately. Lots of people
are not happy with this, myself included. I’ve got a whole bunch of complaints:
- Far, far too much white, the lack of contrasts and heading/section colors
makes it hard for your eye to pick out logical divisions
- Lack of easy-to-see separators, which does the same thing
- In the case of Google Reader, WAY too much use of whitespace
- Scrollbars (in Chrome at least) are way too skinny, which makes those of us
who don’t use a scroll wheel (that’s a separate rant) have trouble grabbing
the scrollbar and moving it.
- In Gmail, the use of transparency on buttons makes them very hard to see when
one uses one of their “HD Themes” which has an image in the background
- In Docs, the menu bar is no longer clearly a menu bar. I’m not sure why
there’s this trend of screwing with menu bars lately (I’m lookin' at you,
Microsoft), but the Common User Access guidelines are a GOOD thing.
- Various UI elements don’t show up until you mouse-over them, or do some other
action. I understand why they’re doing that, but it makes things a bit
awkward when you want to say, delete an email, but don’t realize that you have
to select it before the delete button shows up.
The fix
I’ve started making some custom stylesheets for all of the Google tools I use.
So far, I have the following:
You’ll need a tool that lets you apply user stylesheets to sites, such as
Stylish for Firefox
or Stylish for Chrome.
If you do a better job than me, let me know. Thanks to Rachyl for some of the
styles.