Anand Agarawala: BumpTop desktop is a beautiful mess

182,530 views ・ 2007-06-20

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:25
So, I kind of believe that we're in like the "cave-painting" era of computer interfaces.
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00:30
Like, they're very kind of -- they don't go as deep or as emotionally engaging as they possibly could be
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00:34
and I'd like to change all that.
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00:36
Hit me.
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00:39
OK. So I mean, this is the kind of status quo interface, right?
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00:42
It's very flat, kind of rigid.
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00:44
And OK, so you could sex it up and like go to a much more lickable Mac,
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00:48
you know, but really it's the kind of same old crap we've had for the last,
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00:52
you know, 30 years.
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00:54
(Laughter) (Applause)
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00:57
Like I think we really put up with a lot of crap with our computers.
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01:00
I mean it's point and click, it's like the menus, icons, it's all the kind of same thing.
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01:05
And so one kind of information space that I take inspiration from is my real desk.
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01:09
It's so much more subtle, so much more visceral
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01:13
-- you know, what's visible, what's not.
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01:15
And I'd like to bring that experience to the desktop.
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01:18
So I kind of have a -- this is BumpTop.
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01:22
It's kind of like a new approach to desktop computing.
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01:25
So you can bump things -- they're all physically, you know, manipulable and stuff.
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01:32
And instead of that point and click, it's like a push and pull,
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01:35
things collide as you'd expect them. Just like on my real desk,
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01:39
I can -- let me just grab these guys -- I can turn things into piles
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01:42
instead of just the folders that we have.
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01:48
And once things are in a pile I can browse them by throwing them into a grid,
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01:52
or you know, flip through them like a book
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01:55
or I can lay them out like a deck of cards.
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02:00
When they're laid out, I can pull things to new locations or delete things
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02:05
or just quickly sort a whole pile, you know, just immediately, right?
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02:10
And then, it's all smoothly animated, instead of these jarring changes you see in today's interfaces.
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02:15
Also, if I want to add something to a pile, well, how do I do that?
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I just toss it to the pile, and it's added right to the top. It's a kind of nice way.
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02:23
Also some of the stuff we can do is,
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02:25
for these individual icons we thought -- I mean,
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how can we play with the idea of an icon, and push that further?
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02:30
And one of the things I can do is make it bigger
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02:33
if I want to emphasize it and make it more important.
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02:35
But what's really cool is that since there's a physics simulation running under this,
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02:39
it's actually heavier. So the lighter stuff doesn't really move
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02:44
but if I throw it at the lighter guys, right?
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02:48
(Laughter)
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02:51
So it's cute, but it's also like a subtle channel of conveying information, right?
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02:56
This is heavy so it feels more important. So it's kind of cool.
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02:59
Despite computers everywhere paper really hasn't disappeared,
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03:02
because it has a lot of, I think, valuable properties.
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03:04
And some of those we wanted to transfer to the icons in our system.
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03:07
So one of the things you can do to our icons, just like paper, is crease them and fold them,
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03:11
just like paper. Remember, you know, something for later.
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03:15
Or if you want to be destructive, you can just crumple it up
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03:18
and, you know, toss it to the corner.
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03:21
Also just like paper, around our workspace
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03:24
we'll pin things up to the wall to remember them later,
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03:26
and I can do the same thing here,
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03:29
and you know, you'll see post-it notes and things like that around people's offices.
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03:32
And I can pull them off when I want to work with them.
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03:34
So, one of the criticisms of this kind of approach to organization is that,
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you know, "Okay, well my real desk is really messy. I don't want that mess on my computer."
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03:43
So one thing we have for that is like a grid align,
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03:46
kind of -- so you get that more traditional desktop. Things are kind of grid aligned.
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03:50
More boring, but you still have that kind of colliding and bumping.
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03:53
And you can still do fun things like make shelves on your desktop.
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04:00
Let's just break this shelf. Okay, that shelf broke.
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04:03
I think beyond the icons, I think another really cool domain for this software --
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04:08
I think it applies to more than just icons and your desktop -- but browsing photographs.
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I think you can really enrich the way we browse our photographs
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and bring it to that kind of shoebox of, you know, photos with your family on the kitchen table kind of thing.
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04:22
I can toss these things around. They're so much more tangible and touchable --
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04:25
and you know I can double-click on something to take a look at it.
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04:28
And I can do all that kind of same stuff I showed you before.
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04:30
So I can pile things up, I can flip through it, I can, you know --
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04:33
okay, let's move this photo to the back, let's delete this guy here,
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04:39
and I think it's just a much more rich kind of way of interacting with your information.
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04:43
And that's BumpTop. Thanks!
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