Since devinb's comment here makes a good point, I propose making the top bar optionally floating on top, just like the notification bar. In fact, I'd like this to replace notifications by an additional Symbol, e.g. !! which could, just like the brand new StackExchange logo, popup into the unread notifications. In addition, this bar could include new navigation elements to jump to the next or previous answer in the current question.

navbar

Once again, the floating on top should be optional

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greasemonkey anyone? – Tobias Kienzler Aug 24 '10 at 13:12
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1 Answer

The top bar would be unable to distinguish where your focus is, that is, what exactly are you trying to get to the "next" when you click "next.

Would it be the next question? Based on what criteria.

Would it be the next answer? How do I know what my current answer is?

The navigation bar at the top would be completely unintuitive because there is no way for it to show what it applies to.

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D'oh! I seem to like ambiguity today... But next answer would make more sense (unless it means the next question in search results. sigh). I first thought of suggesting up and down arrows, but that would be too easily confused with voting. What else could be used? – Tobias Kienzler Aug 24 '10 at 12:47
@Tobias. Your mouse wheel, the browser scroll bar? I am really struggling to understand the need for this feature :) – Diago Aug 24 '10 at 12:52
@Diago♦: One single click instead of an applied binary search – Tobias Kienzler Aug 24 '10 at 13:03
@Tobias. I think you need to review your questions and be way more specific, because I think all of us are reading something completely different from what your intending to convey – Diago Aug 24 '10 at 13:21
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@Diago, I understand what he is attempting to accomplish, but I think it is impossible. Basically, he wants an easy way to say "I don't want to finish reading this answer, skip to the beginning of the next" and he wants it to be a single operation, rather than a series of coordinated actions like scrolling to an unknown point. It makes sense. But this is the kind of problem that Microsoft and Apple have been struggling with for decades. Basically, how do you have what the user wants already be there. – devinb Aug 24 '10 at 13:35
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