I understand that the following proposal is radical and that it is perhaps too late. If that's so, I'm sure that this list will have no trouble coming to that conclusion. I think it is worth at least considering the possibility.<br>
<br>There are several places in an interface where there is a spacial metaphor for time: in the undo/redo icons; in the forward/back buttons for browse; in the play/FF/Rev buttons on a media player; in the journal list view; and probably a few others I'm forgetting. Generally, icons use a left/right axis to represent time, and lists use an up/down one, with the top being most recent (a growth/stack/strata model, the opposite of a text/freefall model). The problem with left/right is that it is biased towards LTR languages (or it requires extra L10N work), and it inevitably inconsistent with the up/down axis necessary for lists. <br>
<br>It would not actually be especially difficult to redo the relevant icons to represent an up/down axis, and I think that it would make our platform more internally consistent and more international.<br><br> (Also, the folding screen makes it easy to conceptualize up/down as forward/back, in whichever direction is conveient for the culture - western cultures walk towards the future, while in Japan it approches one from behind. I'm not an expert, but I've heard that ASL and JSL use these forward/back axes for representing time, while in Ghana Sign Language the up/down axis of a growing tree or the arc of the sun are used.)<br>