![]() There were a lot of positive comments on the use of space in Zeeshan Syed’s design. We expect future versions of Bugzilla to draw a lot on the usability concepts present in Faaborg’s design, even though it is not the first-place winner. It was impressive that everything on the page is basically text or lines, and yet it creates a very readable, clean, simple layout. ![]() There were a ton of positive comments on the usability aspects and organization of Alex Faaborg’s theme, particularly some of the new fields suggested and the brilliant use of color to improve the scanability of the page. Let’s just say a few words about each of these designs: Alex Faaborg I would be personally happy to write a recommendation for any of the above designers, and they may contact me for that if they wish. In the 13 years of Bugzilla’s history, I’ve never seen it done before these entries. Simply the ability to take Bugzilla’s existing UI and turn it into something that nearly everybody finds attractive is an accomplishment that few designers could achieve. There were four candidates who were mentioned in some positive way by almost every voter:Īny of these designers would be a worthwhile addition to any UX team anywhere. Every single person who entered had innovative ideas, and nearly every entry was prettier than our current UI. ![]() All the votes are in for the “Make Bugzilla Pretty” contest, and we have a winner!įirst off, let me say that every single entry was amazing.
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