Despite being a heavy cell phone user for more than 25 years, it only recently occurred to me that vertical navigation on most phones is inverted when compared to traditional computers. You swipe down to navigate upward, and up to navigate downward. I recently spent time using a MacBook, which apparently defaults to this “natural” scrolling (mobile-style), and I was completely thrown off by it.

I’ve been using natural scrolling on a couple of my own desktops ever since, mostly as a mental exercise, and I wondered…how many of you folks prefer this method?

    • Skull giver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl
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      1 year ago

      Natural scrolling acts as if you’re pushing a piece of paper up and down with your finger. Normal mouse scrolling acts as if you’re using the mouse wheel to move a piece of paper.

      Both are leaky abstractions, neither is natural or unnatural. “Natural scrolling” is just a fancy name for “we prefer scrolling the other way around”.

      It’s like calling putting the close button in the top left “natural window controls” because that’s what macOS does.

    • xhci@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      IMO it depends if you use a trackpad or not. It follows how you would move an object in the real world.

      One thing I really like about macs is their trackpads & corresponding algorithm. I’ve almost been able to replicate it on my OpenBSD machine, but I can never quite get the feel just right.

    • aksdb@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      I guess it depends on what the base line is. When reading a large news paper for example, I presume most people hold it steady in their hand and move their head to progress. Which would be the “traditional scrolling”. If you assume a large scroll of paper (ancient egyptian style) I guess moving the scroll and keeping the head (mostly) steady works fine or even better. That would be the “natural scrolling”.

      But yes, in modern times I can’t think of an equivalent of the scrolls to explain why we would consider that “natural”, if we don’t do it outside of the computer.