With Facebook’s annual f8 developers conference just days away speculation is rife that major announcements and changes will be coming our way in the next year. As usual there is always going to be the almost obligatory user interface design tweak. Two of the projects generating a lot of interest are Project Spartan and Project Titan. Project Titan is Facebook’s plan to create a unified inbox that combines messaging, IM, texting, and email into one user interface design.
The more mysterious and ambitious Project Spartan hasn’t even been officially confirmed but could have the biggest implications. The project is supposed to create a web app ecosystem for Facebook using HTML5. Gaming will most certainly be the vanguard of Project Spartan but as has been seen with Skype for Facebook other web apps will be bound to add functionality to Facebook’s clean user interface design. Naturally the fear is that with more and more functionality added Facebook’s user interface design could become more noisy. Yet Google+’s integration of a games tab has not impacted its usability negatively.
A new user interface design tweak that has been released before the conference kicks off is that the navigation bar is now omnipresent. The navigation bar now remains locked at the top of the user interface design no matter how far down you scroll, just like Twitter. This I think is one user interface design change that is sure to cause no outrage from disgruntled Facebookers. The navigation bar is so unintrusive it even takes up less of the user interface design than Twitters navigation bar. In many ways this user interface design tweak is a no-brainer as the navigation bar is central to smoothly using Facebook, at least more so than the aforementioned Twitter.
