The real value in this site is not "what UI/UX details can I copy" but "how can I (re)think things to add this level of usability to my work". It's a way of thinking that you need to adopt.
As Abraham mentioned, there's a timeout for duplicate detection.
In this case, it's probably worthwhile. I remembered the post from a year ago, and it's much more polished a year later, and is likely to get a better reception.
If you want to develop your lateral thinking, don't read crap like this and put yourself in isolation instead. Solitude breeds creativity, not reading about other peoples' creativity.
While thinking outside the box is certainly useful, I think Jobs "great artists steal" though is also very important here.
There are lots of great things that have come about from people improving on others ideas. The car was a huge improvement over the horse, but lots of different people since then have made important improvements.
As Android interfaces have pretty much universally been worse than iPhone counterparts, I'm all for people copying something that improves them and improves the overall quality of the store.
Jobs attributed it to Picasso, but there's no record that Picasso ever said such a thing.
T.S. Eliot did write something like it:
"One of the surest tests [of the superiority or inferiority of a poet] is the way in which a poet borrows. Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal; bad poets deface what they take, and good poets make it into something better, or at least something different. The good poet welds his theft into a whole of feeling which is unique, utterly different than that from which it is torn; the bad poet throws it into something which has no cohesion. A good poet will usually borrow from authors remote in time, or alien in language, or diverse in interest."
That quote was subsequently used in a biography of Picasso by John Richardson. Maybe that's how Jobs came to remember it as a quote by Picasso.
Could you provide an example of something that is worse on Android that doesn't depend on your preference?
I moved from an iPhone to an Android almost a year ago and found the Android OS and most of the apps much easier to use than on my iPhone (knowing where to find settings for different apps was a big thing). That doesn't mean that Android is better than iOS, it just means that I prefer it.
I have been experimenting with days off (that I hope to turn to weeks or months) of looking at or reading other people's work in favor of exploring my own ideas in a more complete way. That being said, if you live in a cave you will be making cave paintings while others paint the chapel.
>he was increasingly isolated from the rest of the physics community. Because of the huge strides made by quantum theory in unraveling the secrets of atoms and molecules, the majority of physicists were working on the quantum theory, not relativity.
Nonetheless, what I said was inaccurate. Isolation does breed creativity but the fruits of it must be shared if something meaningful is to occur.
Looking to others' works for inspiration is not a bad thing. You just need to ask why they did something rather than "how can I copy it." You can begin to copy/emulate once you have an understanding of why the choice was made and if that why fits with yours.
I like this site and subscribe to the feed. It offers me a quick view at good/cool UI components and if I want more info, I go to the service to play with it.
Yeah, this whole "standing on the shoulders of giants" thing is unnecessary to people of your immense ability. There is no faster or more certain road to mediocrity than hiding your work from the scrutiny of others or refusing to look at what others have done first.