New MMA steps backward
Posted: Fri Jun 02, 2023 9:55 am
I was initially delighted to see a new interface in MMA. After using it for many weeks, I am disappointed that usability takes some steps backward and there were few, if any user interface upgrades. (I have it on a Samsung S10, Android 12, up to date)
First, the bugs:
Add a track to a new playlist is a dead end. The screen to type in the name of a new playlist appears, but the "create" button is inaccessibly buried under the keyboard with no intuitive way to unearth it. I found it only by accident when the screen saver kicked in and I had to reopened it to see MMA. Switching MMA to the background and bringing it back forward to reveal the "Create" button is at best, cumbersome.
The new ratings panel is abysmal. The previous version wasted potential screen space by bunching all the stars in a centered cluster across the top of the album cover. It also had no provision to remove all the stars from a selection. The new interface further compounds this in two ways. First, it cuts the height of the stars area by about 1/3 making them less easy to set. Second, the ratings banner is now semi-transparent making it difficult to distinguish and locate above the noise of the background of the album cover. Cute programming for visuals but a step backward in functionality.
The rating stars would be more user friendly, even at the same size, if they should be spread more across the width of the screen and the touchable area was more than just the star itself (a technique Apple offers among their UI programming tools).
The lapses:
The true power of MMA is the ability to carry a sample of a much larger library in your pocket. As such, the main interactive activity one would reasonably expect in MMA is the ability to easily manage playlists and their content.
A crucial lapse in MMA's functionality is the bizarre multi-step process to remove a song from a playlist. As MMA always shifts a playlist into what is now called "Playing queue," you first have to tap back to the playlist you initially selected for playing and then remove it. Then return to the playing queue. This is way to cumbersome.
There is no way to move a track or tracks from one playlist to another. This could be a two tap operation.
There are many more simple one and two tap playlist editing options that would make MMA a joy to use. I'm certain I'm not the only customer using MMA as a portable music library management tool.
The recent user interface changes may have been necessitated by some important background coding changes but users were forced to learn a new interface with little or nothing to gain for the effort.
First, the bugs:
Add a track to a new playlist is a dead end. The screen to type in the name of a new playlist appears, but the "create" button is inaccessibly buried under the keyboard with no intuitive way to unearth it. I found it only by accident when the screen saver kicked in and I had to reopened it to see MMA. Switching MMA to the background and bringing it back forward to reveal the "Create" button is at best, cumbersome.
The new ratings panel is abysmal. The previous version wasted potential screen space by bunching all the stars in a centered cluster across the top of the album cover. It also had no provision to remove all the stars from a selection. The new interface further compounds this in two ways. First, it cuts the height of the stars area by about 1/3 making them less easy to set. Second, the ratings banner is now semi-transparent making it difficult to distinguish and locate above the noise of the background of the album cover. Cute programming for visuals but a step backward in functionality.
The rating stars would be more user friendly, even at the same size, if they should be spread more across the width of the screen and the touchable area was more than just the star itself (a technique Apple offers among their UI programming tools).
The lapses:
The true power of MMA is the ability to carry a sample of a much larger library in your pocket. As such, the main interactive activity one would reasonably expect in MMA is the ability to easily manage playlists and their content.
A crucial lapse in MMA's functionality is the bizarre multi-step process to remove a song from a playlist. As MMA always shifts a playlist into what is now called "Playing queue," you first have to tap back to the playlist you initially selected for playing and then remove it. Then return to the playing queue. This is way to cumbersome.
There is no way to move a track or tracks from one playlist to another. This could be a two tap operation.
There are many more simple one and two tap playlist editing options that would make MMA a joy to use. I'm certain I'm not the only customer using MMA as a portable music library management tool.
The recent user interface changes may have been necessitated by some important background coding changes but users were forced to learn a new interface with little or nothing to gain for the effort.