
Category: Best Designed Interface in a Non-GUI App 43
Hey! We're Unix junkies, right? That whole mouse thing is just a fad anyway. The CLI is more efficient for a lot of things... and a good
ncurses app is gonna run a heckuva lot faster than, say, Netscape. So this is your chance to nominate the non-graphical application you love most. The one with the interface that you wouldn't trade in for all the bloated graphics and icons in the world.
cdparanoia (Score:2)
AJAX interface to EMBOSS (Score:1)
This is an interface that describes all the inputs to the programs. It means that the one program can be linked to whichever frontend you wish be it web, javabean, corba or whatever. Just parse the program description file (ACD file) and you are in..
Have a look atThe EMBOSS project [sanger.ac.uk] for more details.Vim (Score:2)
Yes, I am risking a vi/emacs flamewar.
And, yes vi has been around forever.
And, yes there are a bunch of other vi clones.
But I use vim everyday, and I would hate to have to use something else. I am addicted to syntax highlighting, keyboard driven commands, and regex driven search and replace.
So call me old fashioned if you want, but I'm nominating vim.
Lynx (Score:1)
Re:Vim (Score:1)
Of course the same exact complaint applies to emacs.
iptraf (Score:1)
pine (Score:2)
Mutt (Score:1)
midnight commander (Score:1)
Re:Agreed. Kudos to pine. (Score:2)
Pine makes it very easy to do your email over a remote shell session.
My only gripe with pine is how difficult they make it to make your reply-to address different from your username -- it's a hidden option!
pine also includes the pico editor which I nominated as best open source editor.
vi ! (Score:1)
hjkl me !
Emacspeak (Score:2)
for computer users who are blind.
Written by T.V. Raman [cornell.edu] who is blind himself,
Emacspeak has opened the door of high performance
computing to many others who would be locked out otherwise.
Even the NSA is using it [vassar.edu]. So it has to be powerful
Emacspeak provides speech enabled web browsing,
spread sheets, speech icons, speech locking
(different kinds of text are spoken with different
voices, similar to text colorisation in Vim),
speech enabled handling of formulas, email, news
and so many more features. Check it out yourself. [vassar.edu]
Did you ever see a blind person playing Tetris? [mit.edu]
I did and this was the final kick that convinced me,
that Emacspeak is the most advanced
non graphical user interface available on this planet.
(It is IMHO even more advanced than many GUIs
I therefore nominate Emacspeak for
Best Designed Interface in a Non-GUI App Award.
Enjoy!
Hans
--
ncftp (Score:1)
Re:Lynx (Score:2)
".. I like pork!"
Re:pine (Score:2)
jf
Re:Emacspeak (Score:1)
MC (Score:1)
God this program makes my life sooooo easy. I can barely live without it
cat (Score:1)
I was going to nominate echo, but I decided against it because most shells force you to escape apostrophes and the like. Arguably this is a problem with shells, not echo, but nonetheless, the user experience is less than perfect. Not so with cat.
speck
vim (Score:1)
Re:Vim (Score:1)
Re:Vim (Score:1)
dselect! (Score:1)
pine wins hands down! (Score:1)
And it doesn't stop there. Pine has introduced all these non-techie college students to the beauty and power of telnet--they can check their mail from home now, using the exact same familiar program, with a simple one line command! Furthermore, now all these people know how to use a Unix based text editor: whenever I need to tell somebody to edit one of their files, I just tell them to use pico. "Oh!" they say. "I can handle this!" You try explaining to someone over the phone how to use vi or emacs. Good luck.
Therefore, because of the overall useability of pine, coupled with its spill-over into other areas of useability, I think it deserves the award for best non-graphical UI.
Clark
--
Finding a job shouldn't be work.
Amen (Score:1)
It's quick, it's easy, and it's powerful. What more could you want?
Re:Vim (Score:1)
Re:pine (Score:1)
Recently a user who was very keen on their flashy web interface mail account (which they used on Windows) happened to walk by whilst I was using pine. Their reaction? "You can forward a message just by pressing F and typing their address? That's so easy !!" People like not having to wade through dialog boxes to perform each operation.
-- David.
w3m (Score:1)
--
Window management in a telnet window (Score:1)
For anyone who hasn't tried it, I strongly recommend the GNU program "screen". It provides window management, cutting and pasting, and session saving all in a standard telnet window.
I'd certainly make screen my nomination in this category.
--Div.
But my grandest creation, as history will tell,
Re:vi ! (Score:1)
--Div.
But my grandest creation, as history will tell,
Nethack/Moria/Angband (roguelike) (Score:1)
Set the controls to rogue-like commands and you could swear that the keyboard was built for playing these games.
Re:Mutt (Score:2)
Re:Vim (Score:1)
Vi renders at least a quarter of the keys on a 104-key keyboard no longer necessary;
Vi can be considered therapy for RSI;
Vi users have been clinically demonstrated to become 700% more productive using less(1).
--Alex
XTreeNet! (Score:1)