I really do prefer the new look. Here's a few reasons:
1. the images are given far more prominence in the new site: they're bigger, they're presented centrally and not surrounded by an
awful jumble of multicolored clutter
2. On some pages (such as the
logged-in homepage) the images are displayed really large in a single column - on my screen they look so good they're almost pornographic. I'm discovering new photographers through some of these images every day.
3. The actual site is now monochromatic. Yet another reason the images themselves shine through. I really loathed the old pink-n-blue color scheme, it detracted enormously from pretty much any image.
4. I like the new display of large images on black. At first I didn't take to the black background (I never used to follow those ubiquitous 'View on black!' links) but after a few days it's grown on me. Considering how popular it used to be amongst virtually everyone, I find it ironic that so many people are complaining about it now.
5. The masonry display is a bit tight, and I'm hoping the infinite scroll is going to be axed, but I generally like the 'contact sheet' way of displaying streams: you get a good overview of a photographer's style from the new layout. I ought to add that I haven't experienced any sort of slowdown or performance problems with the new site - in fact, I've found it much faster than ipernity when I've checked there this week (I imagine ipernity is getting overwhelmed by the few thousand refugees - doesn't inspire confidence when you compare with the millions of flickr users).
6. Altogether the look is more contemporary and vibrant. The old look was insipid and very tired, imo. Other than the fact there was 'more whitespace' (mostly due to smaller images), I didn't ever see the visual appeal of the old layout.
Incidentally, a lot of things that people are complaining about (like the lack of thumbnails to navigate streams that someone mentioned in this thread) are not gone at all - that feature is still there, just below the black viewing area. A lot of the complaints are simply due to something moving a few pixels away from their familiar spot.
I still think we should give it time, and give flickr
constructive feedback, to make things better.