Often I come across manifestations of the ideas of non-clickable interfaces in one form or another. A nonclique interface is when an event occurs not by pressing a mouse button over a semantic element, but by hovering over it.
The most common example is auto-expanding menus. I also encountered switching tabs by hovering the mouse over the tab heading and even ... pressing a button in a non-click way:

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Protection against accidental mouse movements is realized either in the form of an event trigger delay (the most common option), or in the need for additional meaningful mouse movement — as is the case with the button.
Apogee pointlessness -
dontclick.itIn theory, all this is pretty cool and progressive. But I would like to see all interfaces such? Not.
The ambush is that I
like to click, like the kinesthetic of the click process. Click-click I can do nothing about it.
I have one impression from dontclick.it - it is bland,
not sexy - there’s nothing to press and nothing to grab onto. Not bulging.
I wonder what the psychological mechanism of all this ... In other words, who is to blame and what to do?