Scrollbars aren't visual noise, they are an indicator that tells you a) that there's more stuff than fits on the screen, b) where you are spatially, in relation to all that stuff, and c) how much more stuff there is, relative to what's shown on your screen. Hiding them leads to users often not figuring out that there's more stuff, and scrolling will get them there.
> Scrollbars aren't visual noise, they are an indicator that tells you a) that there's more stuff than fits on the screen, b) where you are spatially, in relation to all that stuff, and c) how much more stuff there is, relative to what's shown on your screen.
They are visual noise if that information isn’t relevant to you.
If you’re proofreading a long book, they are likely to be more useful than just browsing the web.
> Hiding them leads to users often not figuring out that there's more stuff
Does it?
> and scrolling will get them there.
Really? With most content it’s fairly clear from the content itself.
The scrollbar appears if you use a scroll gesture.
It’s obvious with web pages, and with most content when you can scroll, and removal of visual noise and increasing the content area is good.
I personally use a mouse, and so I have them turned on, but generally I like Apple removing unnecessary clutter.
It’s really no big deal at all.