It also helps if you have tabs showing at the bottom of the screen. (Meaning you have more than one tab.) Then you can simply tap or double tap on the tab button and it will take you back to the top level of that tab.

Looking through both the "Home button vs Logo link?" and "Should I add a 'Home' Button to the navigation?" questions on UX SE, the information in both is still quite relevant even though some of it is two years old or more. "Relevant" doesn't mean there's a clear-cut answer, and really there isn't going to be a clear-cut answer applicable to all. I don't mean this as a cop-out answer but really your users are going to tell you if a Home button is still a must or not, through some testing.


Download Home Menu Button


Download Zip 🔥 https://urllio.com/2y7YkR 🔥



But the decision to remove it never comes before we do some A/B testing, and the threshold for keeping it is often pretty low. Meaning, if even 2 of 10 are confused by the lack of a link, or don't get that a logo links to "the page we have determined to be 'home'", then we put that explicit link in there. And really, that happens more than you'd think. I do not agree that most users know that logo == home, mostly because I've seen users not "get" that time and again (regardless of age, which in my experience has little relation to tech-savviness with regards to web use). But again, your users/potential users, and your content, will help whether or not it's still needed in your particular instance.

Some sites don't have traditional homepagesFacebook does not have a home page... It has a News feed, a profile page and a login page but none of these can be described as a "Home page". So it doesn't make sense for every site to have something called a "homepage" anymore.

Some sites use a descriptive titleTake for example Behance.net, this site uses "Gallery" as a descriptive title for the homepage that applies specifically to the context of the site's content:

If you are looking for a happy medium between a home link and a link on a logo... The navigation on Balsamiq's site takes an interesting approach, where hovering over the logo triggers a fun prompt: "let's go home"

As the original question noted, it depends on the internet savviness of your audience. On the whole, it's gone up of course, but it's still not universal by far. E.g. I'm sure that neither of my parents are aware of the "Logo convention". So, any site that's tailored to seniors should definitely have a Home button.

You can think about it from a different perspective: Is the home page important to your users, or would a more contextual link be better? Consider this very page, these is no Home link to , instead we have links to Questions, Tags, and so on. The homepage of this site is just the questions page, so there is no need to explicitly give the user a link to get there.

We have been collecting usage data on the home button from about 750 websites we manage across North America in an effort to try to determine if it is necessary or not. While each website is different, and much of the data is statistically insignificant, we have started to operate with a few assumptions.

3.) Websites without a home button often will see an increase in direct traffic from returning users during a session indicating that users who do not know the logo is a route to the home page will instead clear the address bar back to the root domain to get back home.

Based on our research, we have decided to omit the home button in most instances. Although when it is present, it is often used, most users seem to understand how to get to the home page regardless of the inclusion of a home button. With the complexity of modern websites, we are usually pressed for space in the header and can better use the real estate that would be dedicated to the home button for other UI elements. That said, if the audience for our website skews older, we will still include the home button. Our research has indicated older users are less familiar with the concept of the logo being a home button.

I'll provide the standard UX answer: it depends. With the small bit of information you provided it is tough to make a definitive decision. Navigation is key element to user satisfaction. Effective support of the users task flow is critical. A home screen may or may not provide utility to the task flow - it depends on usage patterns. I'm happy to discuss to get more details...

Title says it all. Previously, there was an option to switch the Oculus and Menu buttons so that you dropped to the Oculus home menu with the left hand menu button instead of the default right hand menu. I had this swapped because I'm a lefty and it allowed me to drop to the main menu in Pistol Whip when I was using only one controller.

Now, I'm trying to revert it back, since in game menus seem to be entirely inaccessible in Hyper Dash if it isn't set to the default...it seems that some prior update removed the toggle from controller settings, so I'm stuck with swapped menu/oculus buttons and no way to revert them.

can someone please help me out in disabling the xbox home button from opening the retroarch menu. I would like to use it for the big box menu but the retro menu is opening along with the launchbox menu.

We just got an Apple TV 4 running TVos13.3 and it works great until it doesn't. Sometimes the "menu" or "home" button just stops working and leaves me stuck in whatever app I'm in. I can continue to navigate deeper into the app, but I can't go back. When I press "menu" or "home" the light on the TV box blinks, but nothing happens on the screen. This is true for the remote that came with the Apple TV, the remote app on my iPhone, and the universal remote that we use (Logitech Harmony).

This morning I went in to Amazon Music but I couldn't navigate to anything because the "menu" button wouldn't work. I used siri to "go to the home screen" and navigated to settings>system>restart. So far it's working, but I've been through this before.

P.S. Before ordering a new HDMI cable you can temporarily set the output of Apple TV to 1080p instead of 4K and see if the Menu and TV/Home buttons work. If the buttons work at 1080p but not at 4K it means you need a better shielded HDMI cable. At 1080p Apple TV is sending less data on the HDMI cable then at 4K.

I was wondering if this will ever be implemented into Launch Box and Big Box since it would be very handy. Also do you think a transparent pause menu would be possible? As in you can see the game paused in the background? It would just make it look that much better, though I know it's not important. And the ability to map the save/load game command to emulators that don't normally support it in the pause menu (like ePSXe, mapping Save State to F1 and Load State to F3, for example).

Hey quick addition to this, if you already have hotkeys set up in Retroarch (I have my hotkey button as "select", then a number of commands for opening the menu, resetting the game, all kinds of things), So my save-state button in the pause menu wasn't working because I needed it to hit Control+F2 to save and Control+F4 to load state. First, I was just holding control while pressing save, but then I found this thread....

'In addition, the Menu button on the Siri Remote does not behave as expected in your app.Specifically, when the user launches the app and taps the Menu button on the Siri Remote, the app does not exit to the Apple TV Home screen.'

I'm looking this up and from what I can tell this should be the automatic behaviour of pressing the menu button when on the initial view controller. However I have a navigation controller with a root view controller, instantiated automatically via the storyboard with no methods overridden and nothing happens when I press the menu button on this view controller.

In a more generic way, the Menu button should take you to the home screen only in some conditions, first one would be when you start the app and click the Menu button, and later on in your app if you are at the 'root view' of your app.

If you display something on the screen, like a popover/dialog which is not controlled by the standard sdk but manualyl by yourself (ie adding a UIView as popover), then the Menu button should just act as a 'cancel/go back' like it would do on the navigation controller.

I am not sure what started this, but my start button, when pressed won't show the start menu button. The start menu also won't show when pressing on the windows button. This issue also affects some buttons on the taskbar, like the Network, Time, Sound and some others that usually gives a popup, but now does nothing when pressed.

The app Menu Button makes it possible to add buttons to the screen of your device and use them for all kinds of features: raise or lower the volume, return to the home screen, go to the options menu, open an app, control the rotation, and much more.

By default, Menu Button adds a menu with four items to the right side of the screen. That being said, you can customize each and every feature of your new menu from the app's options menu. From that menu, you can change the icon, size, and opacity of each button, as well as add or remove a background color.

Not only that, but Menu Button also allows you to set exceptions for your apps. Normally the menu is always visible, but this interesting feature means you can manually disable it. This allows you to disable the menu while playing games or watching videos, or only enable it for specific apps. 006ab0faaa

football manager 2015 logos download

lux rent a car

download oracledb npm

farm simulator 20 free download

download server 2019 standard