Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

RSS
123

Opinion Articles

Opinion

A radial menu for iPhone 5? It's not such a radical idea

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

Mark Bridge writes:

As sure as eggs, there’ll be an iPhone 5. It’ll be announced on 6th June 2011 if you want my guess. And the latest rumours are suggesting it’ll have ‘radial menus’.

A recently-spotted Apple patent application (pct/us2010/035472) notes “Radial menus can provide desired menu selections without the difficulties inherent in drop-down menus. However, there is minimal use as of yet of radial menus in popular computing applications”.

It goes on to talk about a radial menu that could involve non-uniform spacing, shading, highlighting and the use of ‘radial gestures’ for opening sub-menus.

There’s a good chance we’ll see the radial menu used in iPhone 5, it’s suggested.

But hold on a moment.

Back in February, I met Amir Kupervas at Mobile World Congress. He’s CEO at Emblaze Mobile, the company that had created the First Else. The phone – which ran a Linux operating system – was notable for the design and operation of its user interface. In fact, even though the phone didn’t make it into full-scale production, the Else Intuition interface remains.

And yes, it was radial.

Which suggests a radial interface on a mobile phone isn’t such a radical idea after all.

Click here to listen to our February podcast that includes an interview with Amir Kupervas, CEO of ELSE Mobile, or use the ipadio player below to hear the interview on its own. To receive every episode of our free podcasts as soon as they go online, simply subscribe to the RSS feed or download us via iTunes.

 

Comments

Collapse Expand Comments (0)
You don't have permission to post comments.

Recent Podcasts

ExclusiveMicrosoft, Nokia, Verizon and Vodafone: the latest mobile industry news

We're back after a short break last week - and just in time for three of the biggest industry news stories of the year.

Microsoft's CEO announces his retirement, then Vodafone sells its US operation for $130 billion... and now Nokia's mobile phone business is being bought. Alongside these reports there's also time to talk about 4G in the UK, children with mobiles, roaming charges and the future of smartphones.

ExclusiveDavid Akka talks about Google's future and declares that Android is dead

In this special feature we're talking to David Akka, who tells us why he says Android is dead, why Chromecast is an omen for the mobile industry, why OS companies are getting into hardware and what the future holds for the mobile industry.

David is UK managing director of Magic Software and describes himself as a 'recovering techie'. His personal blog is at davidakka.com.

ExclusiveA week of mobile industry news, from smart meters to stupid drivers

There's good news for Telefonica as it's chosen to support the UK's smart meter rollout - but bad news for fans of the Microsoft Tag barcode, which is being discontinued in a couple of years' time.

We're also talking about drivers who use mobile phones illegally, Amazon's new service for mobile developers, the forthcoming Kazam smartphone, mobile advertising, satellite broadband, wearable security accessories and a word that's completely unacceptable to Motorola.

RSS
First1314151618202122Last

Follow thefonecast.com

Archive Calendar

«May 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
1234567

Archive