Screen blank space at the top
I understand that the resolution has changed on the 8X and that some apps have not updated their apps for the new format, but why is the homescreen defaulting to have the gap at the top of the screen?
Press the Windows(home) button and it defaults to this:
http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b2...porary-6-1.jpg
Instead of this:
http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b2...porary-5-1.jpg
Doesn't make sense to me.
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Because it then cuts off a partial tile there at the bottom, which other people would then complain about.
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Also, they use the top area for the notifications as they come through. I'm with you though, I wish it would line up right against the clock.
Re: Screen blank space at the top
And Microsoft don't want toast pop ups overlapping tiles as it would look pretty nasty.
1 Attachment(s)
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Coffee
Because it then cuts off a partial tile there at the bottom, which other people would then complain about.
On the 920, the default view when returning to the start screen has a cut tiles at the bottom...
Attachment 23841
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Just saying it wouldn't matter however it was displayed, someone would find fault in it. It's just not a big deal.
Re: Screen blank space at the top
I agree. It's a terrible use of screen space and screen design. Noticed it the moment I purchased my 920. Thought there might be some setting to change but now realize there isn't. There really is no argument to support doing it this way.
BTW, I actually think its a bug. It's not coming from Windows. The HTC doesn't do this. The idea of wasting this space at the top of the screen all the time, so occasional toasts don't overlap, seems silly. I'm hoping Nokia fixes this in an upcoming patch.
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Spicymikey
I agree. It's a terrible use of screen space and screen design. Noticed it the moment I purchased my 920. Thought there might be some setting to change but now realize there isn't. There really is no argument to support doing it this way.
BTW, I actually think its a bug. It's not coming from Windows. The HTC doesn't do this. The idea of wasting this space at the top of the screen all the time, so occasional toasts don't overlap, seems silly. I'm hoping Nokia fixes this in an upcoming patch.
I can confirm that the HTC 8X does exactly the same thing. As suggested earlier, it is likely "reserved" space for incoming notifications (i.e. SMS/texts, etc.).
I too find myself lining it up just under the clock...
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Thanks for correcting my bad info. I admit I was going by the screenshots on the marketing material. All the Nokia's show the home screen as it appears after pressing the windows button. All the HTC's show the screen as we would want/expect it to appear. I don't own an HTC and was assuming something I shouldn't.
Regardless of who's doing it, it's a bad idea. So Microsoft still hasn't learned how to manage screen real estate yet. Realized wasting all that space on the right to simply display an arrow was bad, but now are wasting space at the top.
Oh well, still no regrets moving from my iPhone of 5 years. I love this OS and the 920
Re: Screen blank space at the top
That's how it's supposed to be. It''s that way so you can fit 3 large and 1 small tile or 7 small tiles vertically . If it lined up with the clock it would add an extra 1/4th of a tile which gets cut off. I think that would be more annoying.
Re: Screen blank space at the top
No that's the problem. Maybe it works like that on your phone. What do you own? But on my Lumia 920 it only shows 6.5 1/4 sized tiles (like the OP showed in his screen shot).
Messes wiith my OCD and I have to nudge the screen up to make it display the full 7 after I press the windows button :(
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Here's a screenshot of my phone. This is how it looks after pressing the windows/home button. Notice that you only see 6 1/2 tiles. If you move it all up to just under the clock it fits 7 tiles perfectly. Yes an incoming message overlays the top tiles momentarily, but that can't be a good enough reason to waste all that space.
Attachment 26892
Workbook said its the same on the HTC. I'll have to take his word for it but all the literature, the OPs original screenshot, and sinime's screenshot seem to suggest that the HTC does not have this problem. I agree the HTC shows the wasted space at the top, but they must have been smart enough to design the screen format to ensure 7 full tiles displayed INCLUDING the space at the top. Nokia, on the other hand, was not so smart I guess
Re: Screen blank space at the top
I have the HTC 8X and when I push home, I get that blank section, but it shows solid tiles, no cut at the bottom (I have 1 row quarter, 2 rows half and 1 row full) showing a full tile at the bottom. If I move it up to be right below the clock, then the top tiles from the next screen are cut off.
I don't think its a big deal. God knows how much wasted screen space was on my TB!
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Sorry I thought we were all talking about the 8X since this is the 8X sub-forum. That's what I have and it fits 7 small tiles after pressing home. Maybe us 8X owners get 7 tiles but you guys get all the sweet Nokia apps. :smile:
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Big deal? No, definitely not. But its a mistake for sure. And you're right, a little crossover posting going on with me and sinime talking about the 920. Sorry bout that :)
Re: Screen blank space at the top
That space has been present in both Windows Phone 7 and 8 and is nothing new. If nothing else, the extra whitespace is nice to make the screen a little more comfortable than your typical Android or iPhone would be in demanding that space to fill. This even translates up to Windows 8, and if you think about the XBOX there is plenty of space around those tiles as well. It's part of the design.
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Quote:
Originally Posted by
clindhartsen
That space has been present in both Windows Phone 7 and 8 and is nothing new. If nothing else, the extra whitespace is nice to make the screen a little more comfortable than your typical Android or iPhone would be in demanding that space to fill. This even translates up to Windows 8, and if you think about the XBOX there is plenty of space around those tiles as well. It's part of the design.
and Chris laying the law down.
People, negative space is your friend. Embrace it. Love it. Be it.
Re: Screen blank space at the top
negative space = wasted space = an artists view of the world <> productivity :)
I'm not looking for a pretty picture. I want a tool that makes my life more efficient. Please get rid of the wasted space Microsoft.
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Also, to clarify, the 8X and the Lumia 920 have different aspect ratios. Both have the black space at the top - this is by design. The Windows 8 Start screen does the same thing: as it scrolls left to right, there's empty space at the far left so that icons aren't scrunched up against the edge of the screen. I like it.
The reason that the 920 shows a partial tile at the bottom of the screen and the 8X does not is simply the aspect ratios of the screens.
Thus: the reason WP8 has that blank area at the top isn't because it prevents cutoff tiles at the bottom, it's simply aesthetic design language.
Now... the arrow & blank space on the right edge of the screen in WP7.x devices... that's one that never made sense to me.
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Spicymikey
negative space = wasted space = an artists view of the world <> productivity :)
I'm not looking for a pretty picture. I want a tool that makes my life more efficient. Please get rid of the wasted space Microsoft.
1/4 tile <> more efficient either...
There are design reasons that space is there. For example... part of the "Metro" design language is that space in the top for notifications and status. When I go into the Me hub and swipe over, that top space fills with "looking for notifications...". Email: "Email is up-to-date". Messaging: "Signed in (available)". It would bug me more if the start screen wasn't consistent with the rest of the OS than if I was missing out on 1/4 tile. That's part of the greatness of the Windows Phone design language... everything (I guess there's always an exception to the rule) feels like it fits in the OS. And I fill like that space at the top is part of the start screen "fitting in" with the rest of the OS.
1 Attachment(s)
Re: Screen blank space at the top
I guess Samsung agrees with me. At least they realize its stupid and might have just nudged the tiles up a tad for the marketing photo.
Attachment 26973
Either way, its just opinion, so no sense arguing. I'm a software designer. In software design an efficient use of screen space is critical. Again, these are tools, not a picture to hang on the wall. Although it should be pleasant to look at, the design must lean towards utility and efficiency. If you like wasted space they should make the case bigger too with some designs around the screen area I suppose. it would make it harder to carry but it would be more attractive.
Not trying to convince you you're wrong. Just saying its debatable so don't be so sure of yourself in your stance on the issue and tell others THEY are wrong..
Re: Screen blank space at the top
Much better sir. Spare us the attitude that you know best next time. There's just no right answer other than the one that sells more phones. Given the fact that Nokia is hanging on by a thread and Samsung is the #` smartphone maker in the world, it will interesting to see what they do with the OS in one of their phones. The new Samsung ATIV Odyssey should be out in a few weeks. Will they go with a resolution or code modification that allows for 7 full tiles to display after pressing the home button? We'll see if that is the case or the photo was just for the marketing photo
Re: Screen blank space at the top
The only other piece I would add is that while you may not be looking for a "picture to hang on the wall," Windows Phone has made it more clear than not that it has a heavy hand on design and a unique user interface.
If you look across all of the hubs, as well as the layouts they create for apps which developers may or may not adhere to, they commonly utilize white space in amounts you likely won't see on any other platform. That space on top of the phone has been present since the first images of Windows Phone 7 Series came out, and as a previous commentator said, it's likely there to leave room for notifications to appear. If you were looking for a "high information density" phone, there are two other platforms that are wide open for this. The point that Windows Phone has pushed a lower, but more responsible information density is an interesting point to be made. If you look at most of what they've said since day one, the phone was supposed to be about reduction and rethinking what content needs to be presented for the user to get what they need. When you compare screens from Android, Windows Phone, and iPhone, this can be clearly evident.
Either way, I hope the space is left. It helps in letting the status indicators and time be easily read by the eye, vs. being competed with large tiles of color or imagery being bumped up right against them.