Posts Tagged CSS
The Rounded Corner Debate
Posted by Todd Toler in Visual Design on August 27th, 2009

Rounded Corners Are Cognitively Cheaper, Yet Facebook Drops Them Anyways: Image Source: UI & US
Yesterday Facebook announced that it decided to drop all rounded corners in their latest UI refresh, sacrificing those cheerful corner radii on most of its interface modules for the more severe but coder-friendly squared off look. It’ s almost like they’re declaring the end of web 2.0, once and for all. Keith Lang’s UI & Us has consolidated a terrific history of where this rounded rectangle thing started in the first place… with the original Macintosh apparently. Folklore has it that Steve Jobs pointed out to Bill Gates that the real world is full of rectangles and squarish shapes that have rounded corners -stop signs, coffee tables, beverage coasters – so why not user interfaces? Right angled shapes are computationally efficient to draw, but let’s face it – you can put an eye out with one of those things if you’re not careful. And that’s exactly the kind of human-centric thinking that has Apple rounding the corners on everything from your iPhone to those error message pop-ups that you’re getting in iTunes. Interestingly, Lang makes a cognitive processing argument for the benefits of the roundedness, quoting author Jurg Nanni. “A rectangle with sharp edges takes indeed a little bit more cognitive visible effort than for example an ellipse of the same size. Our fovea is even faster in recording a circle. Edges involve additional neuronal image tools. The process is therefore slowed down.”
Recent Comments