Reader UI of the Week: Clean up with Jeska's UI
Each week, WoW Insider brings you a fresh look at reader-submitted UIs as well as Addon Spotlight, which spotlights the latest user interface addons. Have a screenshot of your own UI that you'd like to submit? Send your screenshots along with info on what mods you're using to readerui@wowinsider.com.
Oh, hello there. I didn't hear you come in. Make yourself at home while we talk about Jeska's user interface, a pretty cool center setup that makes tracking hunter cooldowns and timers a breeze. And since Jeska is playing on a laptop, we can discuss some more tips and tricks for laptop users.
Before we begin, though, I want to put the call out again for more submissions to the column. No, we aren't running low -- you guys are great at submitting and putting cool stuff in my email. Rather, I want to begin to categorize each user interface in terms of DPS, healer, tank, PvP- or PvE-focused, and all that, so that new readers have an easier avenue to finding interfaces that fit their playstyles. Here's what you can do: Make it absolutely clear which spec or role your UI best represents, and take screenshots that can exemplify that. That's it!
And please, please, please remember to put "Reader UI of the Week" in the subject of your email; if it's not that, I'm not going to get your email. Yay for UIs! Submit your user interfaces, screenshots, and descriptions to readerui@wowinsider.com.
Take it away, Jeska:
Laptop concerns
I think that Jeska does a good job using the laptop screen space available to her. On the subject of gender, I'm going to be addressing people based off of whatever character is in their screenshots from here on out. I think that that's a lady worgen, so lady worgen it is. If not, please send your complaints to my complaint department at sacco@wowinsider.com.
Now, when I say laptop concerns, I do not mean concerns I have with the laptop medium or viewspace. Rather, I wanted to talk about some of the concerns people have to wrestle with when deciding what to do about laptop-specific issues. One of those is the type of input you use for your laptop. I know many people who are tanks and DPSers who use laptops and never need a mouse, having set up their interfaces to completely rely on keypresses and tab targeting. Others use their laptops as a desktop replacement and have a dedicated mouse and larger keyboard setup ready to go whenever they raid or run dungeons.
Jeska's UI feels like it could work either way, with some tweaking. The traps, shots, and cooldown system under the character are close together and easily mouse-accessible, while retaining a nice, clean look. JS Hunter Bar is an invaluable resource for the dedicated hunter, and with just a little tweaking as Jeska has done, you can get a really solid build out of a minimal amount of space.
If you're going for the no-mouse approach, you might want to make those specific keys part of a modifier setup. For instance, traps can be on the Alt-bound keys, and shots could be on the Ctrl-bound keys. What many of my mouseless friends do is put their rotation on the regular keys and bind special out-of-rotation buttons to the Alt- and Ctrl-bound modifiers. You save yourself the headache of scooting around the screen with your trackpad.
Raiding UIs and keeping things clean
One of the common complaints about raiding user interfaces is that the screen goes from a beautiful, picture-perfect home city creation into a mess of timers, bars, and other crap we have to make sure we're paying attention to while raiding. Well, Jeska's UI proves that, at least for DPS, you can slim down your raiding addons to make everything look palatable and clean.
Notice how the DBM bars start on the left side of the middle setup and then grow larger toward the right of the screen. Instead of doing the traditional top-to-bottom, growing DBM bars that take up a ton of center real estate, Jeska moves the bars from left to right, on a plane where there isn't tons of stuff to be watching and waiting for. Instead of crowding up already crowded areas, move your DBM bars around in areas that get less traffic, and you might be on your way to a cleaner raid setup.
Closing out
I like Jeska's UI mostly because it has given me a pretty cool template to work with for my new almost-85 hunter. While I wouldn't be able to have chat boxes and text information without some type of background like Jeska has here, I'm still confident that the general setup is something to emulate. Tweaks and changes are the name of the game, right? I love the use of DBM from left to right, the simple configuration of a raiding user interface, and the fact that the UI never feels crowded when, in reality, there is a whole lot going on. Great job, Jeska.
Remember, you can submit your user interface to Reader UI of the Week to show off or to get help fixing it up! We love help questions on the column as well, but remember to submit your UI and questions to readerui@wowinsider.com and include "Reader UI" or "Reader UI of the Week" in the subject. See you guys next week.
Interested in getting the most out of your user interface? Come back once a week for more examples of reader UIs. For more details on individual addons, check out Addon Spotlight, or visit Addons 101 for help getting started.
Oh, hello there. I didn't hear you come in. Make yourself at home while we talk about Jeska's user interface, a pretty cool center setup that makes tracking hunter cooldowns and timers a breeze. And since Jeska is playing on a laptop, we can discuss some more tips and tricks for laptop users.
Before we begin, though, I want to put the call out again for more submissions to the column. No, we aren't running low -- you guys are great at submitting and putting cool stuff in my email. Rather, I want to begin to categorize each user interface in terms of DPS, healer, tank, PvP- or PvE-focused, and all that, so that new readers have an easier avenue to finding interfaces that fit their playstyles. Here's what you can do: Make it absolutely clear which spec or role your UI best represents, and take screenshots that can exemplify that. That's it!
And please, please, please remember to put "Reader UI of the Week" in the subject of your email; if it's not that, I'm not going to get your email. Yay for UIs! Submit your user interfaces, screenshots, and descriptions to readerui@wowinsider.com.
Take it away, Jeska:
Hello,Thank you for the email and submission, Jeska. The raid tools that you specifically mentioned in your email, namely TimetoDie and Magic Targets, were going to be part of an Addon Spotlight I was planning for April on some cool raid tools, so I'm glad that a UI crossed my proverbial desk that makes good use of them before I actually recommend them. Good show!
I am humbly submitting my UI for consideration for Reader UI of the Week.
The UI itself was inspired by one of the healing UIs I saw on UI of the Week a while back. I figured I'd try my hand at making a DPS version of it. I've got my more important cooldowns/abilities to monitor up by my focus bar, where I can keep an eye on them. I like the idea of a centralized, higher actionbar that would shorten the distance between looking up at what is going on in the raid, and watching your actions. I've also got an exorbitant amount of bars via DBM because I use DBM-RaidLeadTools. It helps me monitor who has used their Rebirths, or who popped Heroism, and things like that. One thing that I especially like is MagicTargets on the top right. It allows me to see (on mouseover) who is targetting which mob. This helps especially on bosses with adds, as I can easily tell who is switching when they need to be, and things like that. Instead of asking everyone to switch constantly, I can pick and call on whoever hasn't.
Highlighted Addons:
Bartender Ridiculously useful. Each "large" icon is its own actionbar. On the right side, I have popup menus that appear on mouseover.
DBM (+ DBM-RaidLeadTools) The industry standard. I used to use DXE, up until expansion when it was a little slow to update. DBM has been installed ever since.
Listed in order from top to bottom:Grid As a DPS, I don't need to worry about monitoring Grid so much, hence its small size. However, I do raid lead, so keeping an eye on deaths and who bit the dust is a good thing.
- JS Hunter Bar - An amazing hunter focus bar that also tracks cooldowns, stings, and Ready, Aim stacks. There's also a built in swing timer, and boss health (pictured left of the focus value). It is incredibly versatile. Not pictured are the Trap CC timers and the Tranq/HM alerts.
- Quartz - Your standard cast timer. I've offset the name/time to differentiate between my casts and my target's casts. Mine are on top, target on the bottom.
- Stuf (focus target) - My Stuf focus target.
Stuf (me left, target right) I recently changed to Stuf from Pitbull, and I couldn't be happier. You can see I'm trying out the "tiny pixel border" look, and it's stuck. I really enjoy it. It's also somewhat minimalistic because I don't want nonsensical info getting in the way.
MSBT A good way to monitor things like combat data, cooldown refreshers, and incoming heals. There's a bit of redundancy built in by using this mod, along with other things (like JS Hunter Bar). That way, I have no excuse missing a cooldown. :P
Recount I've been contemplating switching to Skada, but Recount is what I've been using for I'm-not-sure-how-long-now. Having the Total raid DPS up is useful when trying to identify problems in raids.
TimeToDie A nice, lightweight mod that, on most boss fights, will allow you to predict time to boss death, given the current raid DPS. Of course, usage of this mod is circumstantial, and really only comes into play into the last phase of many encounters. It allows me to check whether we will clear a berserk timer or not. And it's also nice to know when you'll be done with a boss. :P
Satrina's Buff Frames A fun addon that allows me to track my buffs/debuffs in detail. I enjoy being able to see critical buffs at-a-glance, and the highly customizable nature of this mod allows me to do just that.
MagicTargets Again, as Raid Leader, it is important to monitor who is targetting what during an encounter. If a person is simply sitting on a boss when adds are up, this mod allows me to see that. On mouseover, it gives me a list of who is currently targetting the mob I am hovering over. It also gives me an at-a-glance view of which mobs have which marks, and things like that. It is a great mod that I cannot recommend enough to Raid Leaders.
(also visible: SLDT [beneath recount], and Omen)
I do hope that my UI and the mods I use can help other people come up with ideas, as I'm always looking for new and refreshing views on how other people see the world. That's probably the coolest thing about Post Your UI threads and columns like Reader UI of the Week. It allows us to see how other people look at the world, which is something we can rarely do in real life. :]
Thanks for your time, and consideration!
Jeska
Extremely Bored Hunter
Chromaggus (US)
Laptop concerns
I think that Jeska does a good job using the laptop screen space available to her. On the subject of gender, I'm going to be addressing people based off of whatever character is in their screenshots from here on out. I think that that's a lady worgen, so lady worgen it is. If not, please send your complaints to my complaint department at sacco@wowinsider.com.
Now, when I say laptop concerns, I do not mean concerns I have with the laptop medium or viewspace. Rather, I wanted to talk about some of the concerns people have to wrestle with when deciding what to do about laptop-specific issues. One of those is the type of input you use for your laptop. I know many people who are tanks and DPSers who use laptops and never need a mouse, having set up their interfaces to completely rely on keypresses and tab targeting. Others use their laptops as a desktop replacement and have a dedicated mouse and larger keyboard setup ready to go whenever they raid or run dungeons.
Jeska's UI feels like it could work either way, with some tweaking. The traps, shots, and cooldown system under the character are close together and easily mouse-accessible, while retaining a nice, clean look. JS Hunter Bar is an invaluable resource for the dedicated hunter, and with just a little tweaking as Jeska has done, you can get a really solid build out of a minimal amount of space.
If you're going for the no-mouse approach, you might want to make those specific keys part of a modifier setup. For instance, traps can be on the Alt-bound keys, and shots could be on the Ctrl-bound keys. What many of my mouseless friends do is put their rotation on the regular keys and bind special out-of-rotation buttons to the Alt- and Ctrl-bound modifiers. You save yourself the headache of scooting around the screen with your trackpad.
Raiding UIs and keeping things clean
One of the common complaints about raiding user interfaces is that the screen goes from a beautiful, picture-perfect home city creation into a mess of timers, bars, and other crap we have to make sure we're paying attention to while raiding. Well, Jeska's UI proves that, at least for DPS, you can slim down your raiding addons to make everything look palatable and clean.
Notice how the DBM bars start on the left side of the middle setup and then grow larger toward the right of the screen. Instead of doing the traditional top-to-bottom, growing DBM bars that take up a ton of center real estate, Jeska moves the bars from left to right, on a plane where there isn't tons of stuff to be watching and waiting for. Instead of crowding up already crowded areas, move your DBM bars around in areas that get less traffic, and you might be on your way to a cleaner raid setup.
Closing out
I like Jeska's UI mostly because it has given me a pretty cool template to work with for my new almost-85 hunter. While I wouldn't be able to have chat boxes and text information without some type of background like Jeska has here, I'm still confident that the general setup is something to emulate. Tweaks and changes are the name of the game, right? I love the use of DBM from left to right, the simple configuration of a raiding user interface, and the fact that the UI never feels crowded when, in reality, there is a whole lot going on. Great job, Jeska.
Remember, you can submit your user interface to Reader UI of the Week to show off or to get help fixing it up! We love help questions on the column as well, but remember to submit your UI and questions to readerui@wowinsider.com and include "Reader UI" or "Reader UI of the Week" in the subject. See you guys next week.
Filed under: Add-Ons, Reader UI of the Week








Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
Westane Mar 29th 2011 5:07PM
I also preferred Kamahl as far as lore goes, though Jeska's role in the Karona arc was... okay. What were we talking about?
Worldworstretadin Mar 29th 2011 6:07PM
Great looking UI! I've been wrestling with the problem of trying to fit as much information as possible onto a small screen when I'm forced to move from a 27" iMac to a little 17" laptop (the other half just has to render a video *right now!*). I love the way DBM has been tweaked. Looks like I'll have to wean myself off the 5 action bars that just seem to be essential.
talkaboom Mar 29th 2011 6:33PM
Excellent UI indeed. Very clean and does not miss out on any vital information.
Of late this column has been showcasing some really pathetic examples of screen clutter but today's column more than makes up for it.
Stuf looks really nice, I might just give it a go. Currently using ouf, but lack of quick in-game tweaks makes it a pain.
@Worldworstretadin,
Moving from 27 to 17 is a HUGE difference, and I would recommend keeping some sort of similiarity in the layout. What you could do is drastically reduce the spaces between UI elements. And 5 bars is really too much. Every class can have their abilities in a max of 20 buttons with good macros. On my hunter i just use 7buttons(+4 hidden for the traps. key-bind them and hide the bar). On my DK tank, it goes upto 15. It may seem hard at first, but trust your muscle memory to find your spells/abilities, and you will be surprised how very redundant extra bars are.
Talia Mar 29th 2011 6:21PM
Some cool suggestions in here; I think TimeToDie would be useful for anyone trying to manage longer cooldowns, not just raid leaders watching the enrage timers. Do I have time to pop that 3-min cd and still use it again, or should I hold onto it until burn? I'm definitely grabbing it.
A small suggestion for Jeska would be the addon MarkingBar. It's resizable and movable, and would replace the large chunk of raid marking UI in the top left of the screen.
And finally, a question to Mat and the community - apart from Kong or MoveAnything, is there any way to get rid of the default mini-boss-frames that appear on the right of the screen during many encounters? I find it rarely useful, and I hate having to design around its awkward placement!
radda Mar 29th 2011 7:07PM
Most UnitFrame addons I've used (SUF in particular) have options to disable or move any unit frame, boss frames included.
Talia Apr 1st 2011 6:20AM
I use PitBull, and as far as I can find, it doesn't have that option. Under the module for hiding the various default Blizzard frames, "Boss Frame" (or anything like it) isn't one of them. Plus I have them all checked already anyway, and those side boss frames are still there.
Jeska Mar 29th 2011 6:46PM
Oh, yay! UI of the Week. :D
Thanks everyone for the compliments and the suggestions. I'll have to look into MarkingBar, that sounds like it's just what I need.
Just a few notes to clarify:
Everything is keybound, I just don't like the letters/key cluttering the button itself. For instance, I have all my aspects bound to my mouse, and my traps are shift+key, along with the second row at the bottom. My main buttons are all bound to keys that are easy to access with one hand, all situated around the movement keys. Minimal movement, minimal delay. :]
And yeah, I liked Kamahl too, but Jeska's definitely a hero. :P
Thanks again for the feature!
Dreyja Mar 29th 2011 7:03PM
You don't happen to have a blog do you? You've not written down any of this in a little more detail for noobs like myself? ;)
I've been waiting to see a hunter UI that looked like it actually did the job. Amazing work. :)
yummy.pies Mar 29th 2011 7:50PM
ah, no, no blog. :[ If you need a breakdown, I'd be glad to give it. What did you need explained?
also @wow, yeah, I definitely noticed that redundancy. While it has its usefulness (kinda... not really) I'm working on fixing it. Thanks for pointing it out.
Telerithis Mar 29th 2011 11:44PM
1. Lock your recount and omen.
2. From the default buff ui, the grouped buffs don't go away until you uncheck the frame for grouped buffs in the interface options panel. So do that.
3. As has been said, get rid of redundant boss frames.
Otherwise, you're golden. Nice UI, and grats on getting featured :D
wow Mar 29th 2011 6:45PM
Well, Jeska's UI proves that, at least for DPS, you can slim down your raiding addons to make everything look palatable and clean.
While still keeping information repeated a stupid number of times (thats 3, yes, 3 sets of boss HP frames). Or redundant UI elements up (A simple flick of a default UI option would do away with it)
Dreyja Mar 29th 2011 6:59PM
It's nice to see a nice clean Hunter UI! It can be done, I guess. :) Thanks for this. I've been looking for a cood cooldown tool since Cata dropped.
It's still so intimidating to change the UI this much. I wonder what kind of time this user put in to get it Just Right?
yummy.pies Mar 30th 2011 9:11PM
A. Lot. Of. Time. haha. joking aside...
Maybe about a night? A few hours at most. One thing I did not mention that I used to help me set up placement and things like that is a super-handy-dandy mod called Align. Oh my God, it's amazing. Check it out.
radda Mar 29th 2011 7:10PM
I really need to ween myself off of bars full of icons, at least for raiding.
Is there an addon that can switch addons on/off or change your bar settings when you enter an instance? Most of the reason I keep bars around is to hold my hearth/port spells/food/other misc util that I don't need when I'm trying to not get squashed by Magmaw's face.
Dreyja Mar 29th 2011 7:18PM
Me too. I've been putting it off for... oh, two years now? /facepalm @ self
Oznla Mar 29th 2011 8:34PM
At least with Bartender 4 it is easy to set the visibility of bars to certain conditions. Like you, I have a bar with food, hearth, flasks, professions, teleport, etc but I have it set to go invisible when I am in combat. Actually I have 2 bars like that, so when fighting only 3 show up. And that is mainly because I have not yet got the muscle memory for my modifier-type keybinds. In an emergency I can at least click on them ;-)
Elrandir Mar 29th 2011 9:21PM
That is so clean and pretty! Inspiring me to clean up my own UI some more until it's finally ready to post to wow insider ;p
JC_Icefox Mar 29th 2011 7:20PM
Watch yourself, McCurley. Girl hair can be deadly when provoked.
jcooper Mar 29th 2011 8:36PM
Love the unit frames! My Stuf frames don't look nearly as clean. Can you elaborate on the borders and texture you used?
yummy.pies Mar 30th 2011 9:07PM
The texture of the bar itself is Minimalist, it's in the SharedMedia pack I believe. The border is Fer09 in the Ferous Media pack. :]