
Habits
How quickly UX patterns become habits - Steve Jobs' presentation of the first iPhone
I once again watched the presentation of the first iPhone on YouTube. I watch it once in a while since it is iconic and I simply like the way Steve Jobs gave presentations back then. This time I saw something I haven’t noticed before. After he introduced the iPhone, the iPhone is connected to the presentation and he shows the call app, how to watch videos, how to play and rate music, how to move through cover flow and how to scroll contacts. At one time he opens a detail page in the iPod app (i.e. music app), similar like my amazing drawing:
From the left list view you can access the right detail view by tapping on one of the list items. At all times the right-most tab is selected (that’s why it’s highlighted in orange). Then you can go back - as we all know - by tapping on the back button in the top left corner (indicated by the dotted arrow). In most cases, you’re also able to do a swipe gesture from the left border of the screen to the right to trigger the back navigation. With the tab bottom bar 1 the iPod app provides a third navigation method. Tapping on the already selected tab to pop everything from the navigation stack besides the top most view of the tab. This is different behaviour compared to the back button and the swipe gesture for a navigation stack of size > 2. For a single detail view (navigation stack of 2), all three methods behave the same. Coming back to the presentation, at one point Steve Jobs chooses to tap on the tab instead of using the back button2 which somehow is kind of not ideal.