I don’t know about all of you, I don’t like these new flat icons that everyone is using. What ever happened to the old icons, like on iPhone and Samsung they used to have them years ago. Those were good times. Now it is always these stupid boring cartoonish designed icons. Side note: Somebody please update this icon pack. I am trying to use it on xfce on arch but some of the icons aren’t working properly because it hasn’t been updated in a while. I’ll donate to you right away if you do it. Link to the repo: https://github.com/madmaxms/iconpack-obsidian

  • richardisaguy@lemmy.world
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    2 minutes ago

    i don’t, not at all, but still think elementaryOS looks beautiful! Like holy hell, even on their websites they manage to make their design look good!

  • Eugenia@lemmy.ml
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    7 minutes ago

    Yeah, I don’t understand flatness either. Neither I understand the dark themes either. My eyes and brain simply can’t do the separation easily, I spend more time trying to process an image. Old style icons and UI colors are the best IMHO.

  • nyan@sh.itjust.works
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    9 minutes ago

    My primary icon theme and widget style are 20+ years old and not flat in the least. You can still have that look and feel on a real computer if you want it (but you may have to compromise elsewhere or do some extra work). On phones, all bets are off.

    Dunno what your issue with that icon pack is, but I’d bet there’s a good chance it can be solved with a few file renames or symlinks if you care enough to bother.

  • john89@lemmy.ca
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    12 minutes ago

    I don’t know if you’d call that skeuomorphism, and we have icons that are similar.

    I’m not sure what you would call the opposite of ‘flat’ in terms of these designs, but I think that’s what you’re referring to.

  • BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago

    I miss UIs having lines and clear separations between elements. I loath this new flat style that everything has to have now, where you can’t tell when one thing stops and another starts.

    • GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org
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      20 minutes ago

      And you can’t tell when something is active/focused or not because every goddamn app and web site wants to use its own “design language”. Wish I had a dollar for every time I saw two options, one light-gray and one dark-gray, with no way to know whether dark or light was supposed to mean “active”.

      I miss old-school Mac OS when consistency was king. But even Mac OS abandoned consistency about 25 years ago. I’d say the introduction of “brushed metal” was the beginning of the end, and IIRC that was late 90s. I am old and grumpy.

  • Fonzie!@ttrpg.network
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    2 hours ago

    God, no!

    Though these do look pretty, they don’t look like the buttons in Windows 95/XP and maybe that’s a good thing.

    • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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      12 minutes ago

      I liked the soft gradient XP icons, though maybe that’s just the nostalgia talking

  • communism@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    Yeah, I do miss that, but idk how much of it is nostalgia and how much is an absolute aesthetic preference. I think the main reason for the change though is Microsoft trying to make Windows work well on mobile devices though, meaning forgoing the aero and more expensive VFX.

    Wish some DEs would make their default style more like a win7 era style. Would be nice to have the variety.

  • EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    10 hours ago

    It is by no means just you. I really hate how everything has to be so flat and shadow-less nowadays. I’m not at the point of shaking my fist at clouds yet or anything, but I really miss skeuomorphism in general!

    • deafboy@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Way beyond fist shaking here. My brain simply doesn’t process the trendy flat UX. It looks like when my kitchen garbage can tips over. A piece of carrot here, empty milk crate over there, sprinkled with onion peels, and some unidentified goop that I only discover later in the evening, using my bare feet, while getting a cup of water…

      What’s weird though is that I similarly hate the circle android icons. They all kinda blend together like a bowl of skittles. Make them squircle though… instantly recognizable!

  • vort3@lemmy.ml
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    12 hours ago

    Sometimes I think that I miss skeuomorphism, but then I realize it’s not the skeuomorphism that I miss, but my childhood and days when the world was much simpler.

    Would I like to bring back skeuomorphic UIs? Yes.

    • TimeSquirrel@kbin.melroy.org
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      10 hours ago

      I’m too old to be nostalgic for skeuomorphism. But a retina-burning amber monochrome monitor, text mode, with menus and UIs built out of ASCII graphics, or at best, 640 x 480 CPU-driven graphics modes? Now you’re talking.

      From my perspective, the skeuomorphic era of the early-late 2000s is still “modern”.

    • generaledelsud@lemmy.worldOP
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      12 hours ago

      Ya I feel you, I remember I had an iPod when I was a kid with the icons I think it was iOS 6. Now when I try to find skeuomorphic icon packs on Linux it is almost impossibile and the ones you do find are abandoned ☹️

    • Allero@lemmy.today
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      8 hours ago

      If I understood it correctly, in this context it means that the icons normally retain the original logo and color scheme, while incorporating them into a single style.

      • lime!@feddit.nu
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        8 hours ago

        a skeuomorph (from greek, “tool/container-shape”) is something that retains the characteristics of another thing that it is based on, even though those characteristics are no longer useful. think lamps shaped like candles, or the floppy disk save icon, or media player programs with volume knobs.

        skeuomorphic UX is a good way to get users comfortable with a system by using designs they are already familiar with, and the original iphone used this to great effect.

        This is a good example of skeuomorphic UI: skeuomorph

        all to say, I’m not entirely sure these icons are skeuomorphs. they’re just glossy.

        • stellargmite@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          Yeh the files being little pieces of paper, and the folders being old office folios are skeumorphic. Skeumorphic was (or is?) sometimes used more generically for ui elements made to look physical so perhaps the pseudo 3D shading, dropshadows, bevels and highlights qualify much of OPs examples, though they aren’t representing any specific type of physical object necessarily. Just objects to be grabbed and used (clicked).

          I’m sure trends will bring us back to a similar style at some point like they often do.

          • lime!@feddit.nu
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            7 hours ago

            it’s weird that. it’s obviously possible to have a flat-shaded skeuomorph, just look at basically all of windows 95, but for some reason we connect them to this particular graphical style. files and folders are both part of the old classic “desktop metaphor”, so they basically have to be skeuomorphs. but like, the application icons are basically just mosaic tiles of the normal icons.

            a proper skeuomorph would indicate what the program is for. krita and whatever map software that is are both good, if a little flat. but the libreoffice suite just being squares with a letter on them? have them be like, a spreadsheet for calc, a stack of cards for impress, and a printed page for write.

            remember all the icons for windows 95 network utilities that have people in them? those are also (attempts at) skeumorphs because they’re trying to communicate what the program does.

        • Allero@lemmy.today
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          7 hours ago

          Thanks! Learning more every day

          Also, beautiful design, and probably not bad for a touchscreen (terrible for mouse though)