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Google Gets Rid Of App Launcher In Chrome 52, Browser's Mac Client Gets Material Design (9to5mac.com) 68

Google has finally removed App Launcher that it bundles with the Chrome browser for Windows and Mac with the release of Chrome v52. The Mac client, in addition, now embraces Google's Material Design approach, and comes with new icons and flatter and transparent interface. 9to5Mac documents more changes on Chrome for Mac and Windows: Besides a new flatter, sharper, and transparent design, Material is also a "huge engineering feat," especially for Chrome OS and Windows. Chrome is "now rendered fully programmatically including iconography, effectively removing the ~1200 png assets we were maintaining before," Google noted. "It also allows us to deliver a better rendering for a wide range of PPI configuration."
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Google Gets Rid Of App Launcher In Chrome 52, Browser's Mac Client Gets Material Design

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Great, when this comes to Windows it will finally will scale the Chrome window on a high DPI (what Apple calls ''Retina'') display without making the icons get blurry since it's being scaled programmatically instead of just stretching a PNG asset.

    • While Nice to see. Still most displays are the standard 70+/- DPI like it has been for the past 20 years.
      It isn't too surprising that Google didn't jump to the new display options. Just because the relatively long life of the Standard Display.

  • We are spirits (Score:3, Interesting)

    by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Thursday July 21, 2016 @02:47PM (#52556489)

    in the material world.

  • Hipsters must die (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Thursday July 21, 2016 @02:48PM (#52556501) Homepage Journal

    a new flatter, sharper, and transparent design

    So you can't see anything, you can't find anything and you can't do anything, except by accident - and only if it's not what you wanted to do.

    But fuck all of that, it doesn't look cluttered because everything is within a plain glass squint of mid-grey. Yay! Chocamochackacockasuckalattes all round! WITH SPRINKLES!

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Please kill "material design" and the half-wit that created it. I can't think of a shittier design for a GUI, except maybe one that is completely the same colour (background, foreground, borders, fonts, etc.).

    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Thursday July 21, 2016 @04:25PM (#52557105)
      All they need is a simple settings option which lets you change how you want the app to appear. Material design, Windows 8 Tiles, Windows 7 Aero, bubbly Windows XP, rounded corners Mac OS, do you want drop shadows or not, whatever. There is absolutely nothing preventing Microsoft / Google / Apple / etc. from letting the user pick how they want their computer desktop to look. The computer doesn't know the difference. To it, it's just a window with graphical elements overlaid on top of it.

      It's like the designers at these companies are on a power trip, deriving satisfaction from knowing they can force everyone to bend to their will.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        There is absolutely nothing preventing Microsoft / Google / Apple / etc. from letting the user pick how they want their computer desktop to look.

        Sure there is. All of the complaints about how it looks like crap with settings X and Y which Google never tested. Or, in the alternative, the additional burden of testing every possible configuration and the engineering effort to fix whatever issues the testing finds (and regression test the fixes, etc. etc. etc.).

      • There is absolutely nothing preventing Microsoft / Google / Apple / etc. from letting the user pick how they want their computer desktop to look.

        Except for the maintenance and testing of graphics libraries which is difficult enough for a single program but is a mammoth task on an OS level.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Fuck them in their stupid faces for removing the back one page in history shortcut from backspace.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I think I'm one of the few people who actually used the app launcher. I still use it daily. Hoping someone releases a decent replacement (that is a little faster than the original)

  • Dumb boast (Score:2, Interesting)

    by GrahamCox ( 741991 )
    Chrome is "now rendered fully programmatically including iconography, effectively removing the ~1200 png assets we were maintaining before,"

    This is dumb. Utterly dumb. What they should have done is used vector assets, such as PDF, or if that's too "non-Google" for them, SVG or anything similar. Coding images doesn't make sense - you have to maintain that code and it's a complex effort for anyone to alter what's rendered. Compare that with simply swapping out a resource created in a vector art program.
    • by tgv ( 254536 )

      > This is dumb. Utterly dumb.

      Only from an engineering point of view. But if you don't like people customizing your application by replacing the images and colors, it suddenly makes sense.

    • I assumed they meant they use SVG or some vector format. I would say drawing the icons to scale based on vector data counts as "rendered fully programmatically". A bitmap has to be redrawn or scaled or otherwise processed for different screen sizes and pixel depths. I suppose they could be creating every icon with a graphics context, some complex mathematical formula and a bunch of lineTo, bezierTo, stroke, fill, etc, etc. I'd hate to maintain it though.

    • Coding images doesn't make sense - you have to maintain that code and it's a complex effort for anyone to alter what's rendered

      Just what do you think vector graphics are if not a set of coded instructions on how to draw on a screen?

      • As I'm the chief architect, technical director and main code monkey for this [mapdiva.com], I do know what vector artwork is.

        There's still a big difference between encapsulating the graphics commands in a file as written by an illustration app and just writing lines of code to do the same thing.
  • One step forward, one step back... So it's a typical Chrome release, then? :-/

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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