Comment by alansaber

7 hours ago

Why can't technical people appreciate that us, the silent majority, love having our scroll hijacked? I can't remember the last time I used a scroll bar to navigate a website, but using it to navigate between choppy javascript keyframes fills me with joy.

This isn’t scroll hijacking

You can scroll normally, with all your favorite keys, or go super fast to the bottom

It’s just scroll animations. Bad ones, admittedly.

  • > just scroll animations. Bad ones

    Scroll animations, post-grid floating voids, bouncy house dampening, hyper rounded... everything. These are the 50s Chevy fins of today.

    I've enjoyed working with some great designers over the years, Stanford D-School and even wild-raised. All the good ones intuitively steered clear of trends destined to be era-stamp tropes. They'd say, "I can already hear the ghosts of design-future mocking me: 'That's so early-AI' and 'Yo, the mid-20s called and wants their bento grid back.'"

    • >trends destined to be era-stamp tropes

      This page was designed for today, for making it to HN, not 'the ghosts of design-future'.

  • > You can scroll normally

    Except you can’t.

    I scroll down, and the content of the page doesn’t move as expected.

If they're not scroll hijacking, then we're just jacking it ourselves. Think about it.

Thanks, web designers <3

"love having our scroll hijacked? "

You are the silent majority?

No doubt non technical people have different UX experience than tech nerd, but I have seen plenty of "normal" people curse at artsy fluffy design, that made known navigation skills useless and nobody likes their time wasted.

  • Pretty sure your parent comment was being sarcastic. Why else would they write “choppy javascript keyframes fills me with joy”?

    • Well, I missed that word, but my irony/sarcasm detector has lately been a bit uncalibrated by the current zeitgeist.