Office 2007 Ribbon Saga
There is some fantastic information available, about the evolution of the Ribbon (Fluent User Interface) for Office 2007.
I first heard about it on Clint's post to the Access Team Blog.
He points to an article by Jensen Harris, Group Program Manager of the Microsoft Office User Experience Team.
And in particular a video of a recent presentation done by Jensen, showing some of the steps in the process of deciding on the Ribbon concept, and putting it together.
(Note: 146 Mb, 70 minutes)
For some reason, this has really caught by imagination, and I have just looked through it a second time. Even though I had heard about a lot of it before, I have found it totally fascinating to get a glimpse behind the scenes of such a bold process.
It is a very nicely done presentation.
Of course, the Ribbon interface itself has received a mixed reception. This is not surprising - adjusting to the unfamiliar is always uncomfortable.
Judging by some of the responses to the blog posts mentioned above, there are still a lot of people who are putting up a fight. Then again, judging by these survey results, they are a minority.
I think there is a lot of good information around, to assist people to learn the Ribbon. This includes interactive reference guides for finding Office 2003 toolbar and menubar commands in Office 2007 ribbons. In the case of Access, it is here.
There are some good tools available too, to facilitate customising the Ribbons. I have used these, and can recommend:
RibbonCustomizer
RibbonCreator
And there are also a number of third-party tools available, which mimic an Office 2003 interface within Office 2007, for those who want to live in the past.
But to suggest that Microsoft might revert to the old style, or provide users with a choice, is away with the fairies.
The Ribbon isn't perfect, and nowhere is that more true than in Access. I look forward to seeing improvements in due course.
But no matter how much moaning anyone does, what we have now is still a great step forward, from which there will not be any turning back.
My belated congratulations to Jensen Harris and his team at Microsoft, for stepping up to the plate, and doing what had to be done.



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