I mean I've spent hours flicking through the damn thing looking for something - anything - to watch and failed many times.
(, Tue 29 May 2018, 11:46, Reply)
just that it's easily accessible.
(, Tue 29 May 2018, 15:18, Reply)
It takes far too long to fight through the dross that for some reason it thinks I'd be interested in to find something I'm actually interested in.
That's not down to me not liking the content, that's bad UX hiding the content from me.
As for using the search function with a tv remote? That's time that would be more productively spent gnawing my own foot off.
(, Tue 29 May 2018, 16:10, Reply)
But that's more the remote's fault than netflix.
(, Tue 29 May 2018, 17:12, Reply)
They designed a UI that is a nightmare to use with the control method available. As an example of how it can be done on TV, look at iPlayer. Stuff is in obvious categories and sorted alphabetically. It doesn't pretend to know what you want to watch and therefore you can find things.
(, Tue 29 May 2018, 19:53, Reply)
Almost none of them include a keyboard, so if you're attempting to type something in you'll have to fuck about for ages with a fiddly piece of shit. Netflix is not at fault for that.
TVs and set-top-boxes are also absurdly underpowered and slow as shite, so you often have around a second (or even more) of delay between input and response. Again this is not the fault of Netflix.
Finally, iPlayer, 4oD and all the other things I've used suffer from exactly the same issues.
Certainly they could index stuff alphabetically, but that's an issue of content arrangement, not of the interface itself.
(, Wed 30 May 2018, 11:24, Reply)