View allAll Photos Tagged dragdrop

thought Smurfette, "but at least the horizon's pink - Smurrrfy! Now, just Drop me off at the airport."

OK, it's a bit lame and the pink line of the rug (across the top of the image) bugs me, but unless I come up with something better Smurfette is it :-) My photo mojo is AWOL, but I liked Garth's challenge so much I wanted to do something, even if it's a half-assed attempt - sorry Garth, will try harder next time. I also stick by the belief that the only way to get past photog-block is to keep taking pictures - hope it works!

 

ODC, Drag & Drop (not computers or technology…)

Netvibes allows modules to be arranged directly via drag and drop; the hole cues what will happen when a module is dropped

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

My friend's old typewriter, just asking to be photographed. This photo is also on a great website called Piclits. Check it out!

San Marcos, Texas, USA

Great details at the youth hostel where we stayed. This photo is also on a great website called Piclits. Check it out!

Edinburgh, Scotland

At a market in Greenwich. I had more fun shooting than shopping! This photo is also on a great website called Piclits. Check it out!

London, UK

Cogmap allows organizational charts to be rearranged on the fly with drag and drop

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

This Laszlo shopping cart demo uses both drag and drop and a button action to add items to its shopping cart

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Backpackit allows to-do lists to be rearranged directly via drag and drop

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

As I was shopping for pants online I ran across a site that allows you to zoom and drag around an image that shows the fabric up close. But when you move your cursor off the canvas of the image while dragging, it "gets stuck." I near laughed out loud immediately after this happened given the context in which I was dragging this photo around.

Path leading up to Lindisfarne castle. This photo is also on a great website called Piclits. Check it out!

Holy Island, Northumberland, England

ODT "Drag & Drop"

 

It takes skill to get around the tight places without damage. I admire the people who do this work. Where would we be without them? !

Rerouting in Google Maps is as simple as drag and drop

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

I would be uploading photos - but accidentally thought Uploadr could add a few 1000 photos... drag and drop Mac users, pah!

twitter.com/JoMangee/statuses/772902197

Netvibes allows modules to be arranged directly via drag and drop; the hole cues what will happen when a module is dropped

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Bra drag & drop som både visar var objektet man drar ursprungligen var samt var det kommer att hamna om man släpper. Jämför med Facebooks eller Netvibes som flyttar runt moduler innan man släpper.

Netvibes allows modules to be arranged directly via drag and drop; the hole cues what will happen when a module is dropped

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Interesting moments grid for Netvibes: there are 20 possible moments of interaction; Netvibes specifically handles 9 of these moments

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Netvibes allows modules to be arranged directly via drag and drop; the hole cues what will happen when a module is dropped

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

My Yahoo! uses the insertion bar approach

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

The Oddpost web mail client performed like a desktop mail application and included drag and drop as a key feature

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

In Netvibes, dragging a small module to be placed above a large module requires dragging a large distance; the “To Do List” has to be dragged to the top of the “Blog Directory” module

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

In Netvibes, dragging a small module to be placed above a large module requires dragging a large distance; the “To Do List” has to be dragged to the top of the “Blog Directory” module

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Cogmap allows organizational charts to be rearranged on the fly with drag and drop

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Dragging a small module below a large module requires a smaller drag distance; since the targeting is based on the header of the dragged-over module, the drag distance in this scenario is less than in the previous figure

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

iPhoto uses cursor position: when the cursor crosses a threshold (the edge of the next photo), a new position is opened up

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

When dragging a module upward, iGoogle moves the placeholder when the top of the dragged module crosses the midpoint of the object being dragged over; dragging modules up or down requires the same effort, unlike in the Netvibes example

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

When dragging a module downward, iGoogle moves the placeholder when the bottom of the dragged module crosses the midpoint of the object being dragged over; the distance to accomplish a

move is less than in the Netvibes approach

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

When dragging a module upward, iGoogle moves the placeholder when the top of the dragged module crosses the midpoint of the object being dragged over; dragging modules up or down requires the same effort, unlike in the Netvibes example

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

When dragging a module downward, iGoogle moves the placeholder when the bottom of the dragged module crosses the midpoint of the object being dragged over; the distance to accomplish a

move is less than in the Netvibes approach

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Dragging a small module below a large module requires a smaller drag distance; since the targeting is based on the header of the dragged-over module, the drag distance in this scenario is less than in the previous figure

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Yahoo! Photos uses unnecessary overlay pop ups to communicate what happens when the user drops photos into an album

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Yahoo! Photos uses unnecessary overlay pop ups to communicate what happens when the user drops photos into an album

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

When dragging a module upward, iGoogle moves the placeholder when the top of the dragged module crosses the midpoint of the object being dragged over; dragging modules up or down requires the same effort, unlike in the Netvibes example

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Cogmap allows organizational charts to be rearranged on the fly with drag and drop

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Backpackit allows to-do lists to be rearranged directly via drag and drop

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

When dragging a module downward, iGoogle moves the placeholder when the bottom of the dragged module crosses the midpoint of the object being dragged over; the distance to accomplish a

move is less than in the Netvibes approach

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

When dragging a module downward, iGoogle moves the placeholder when the bottom of the dragged module crosses the midpoint of the object being dragged over; the distance to accomplish a

move is less than in the Netvibes approach

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Performance Drag&Drop. Performer Olga Vavilova. Mediafestival @Platforma 21-28 May 2012, Photos by Nina Sizova

When dragging a module upward, iGoogle moves the placeholder when the top of the dragged module crosses the midpoint of the object being dragged over; dragging modules up or down requires the same effort, unlike in the Netvibes example

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Yahoo! Photos uses unnecessary overlay pop ups to communicate what happens when the user drops photos into an album

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Backpackit allows to-do lists to be rearranged directly via drag and drop

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Yahoo! Photos uses unnecessary overlay pop ups to communicate what happens when the user drops photos into an album

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Yahoo! Photos uses unnecessary overlay pop ups to communicate what happens when the user drops photos into an album

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

Taking a break from photographing the many landmarks in the city. This photo is also on a great website called Piclits. Check it out!

Berlin, Germany

The iPhone provides a drag magnifier lens that makes it easier to position the cursor

 

Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3

 

www.designingwebinterfaces.com

 

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