> But FLOSS software is mainly made by developers. Who [...] are awful at UX
Doesn't UX depend on the target user and product? To take vi or emacs as examples, they have incredibly steep learning curves, but I think many of their users would consider their UXes to be very good.
The hard UX challenge is making a product that can satisfy novice users and power users at the same time. Here I agree that developers most likely have a tendency to develop for their own tastes.
IMO, products like Outlook used to good at satisfying most people out-of-the-box, but have become less good with recent releases.
Doesn't UX depend on the target user and product? To take vi or emacs as examples, they have incredibly steep learning curves, but I think many of their users would consider their UXes to be very good.
The hard UX challenge is making a product that can satisfy novice users and power users at the same time. Here I agree that developers most likely have a tendency to develop for their own tastes.
IMO, products like Outlook used to good at satisfying most people out-of-the-box, but have become less good with recent releases.