Usability Quote of the Day

February 9, 2012

Most people who encounter computer-based automation at work do not choose the software with which they work, and have comparatively little control over when and how they do what they do. For them, the use of computers can be an oppressive experience, rather than a liberating one. -- Sarah Kuhn, Bringing Design to Software, edited by Terry Winograd, 1996    (via interaction-design.org)

Thursday, March 31, 2005

Reveal Those Links Nielsen Says

How many blogs do you see that spell out the URLs of each link contained in a post? Links are one of the defining elements of blogs.

It's the links the build the communities and heighten visibility. In my Web writing workshop, I urge participants to get links out of the narrative and into a "more information" box as a means of reducing distraction and keeping readers focused on your content. But not in blogs. Links in the narrative are at the very heart of blog writing.

So how distracting would it be for someone reading a blog post to have to stop every few lines because in addition to a key word or two, the author has thrown in (perhaps in parantheses) the entire URL of the site to which the words are linked? According to Jakob Nielsen, the Web's best known usability authority, the roadblock to readability these URLs would create isn't an issue. In fact, according to the first installment of a discussion with Nielsen about blogs by Silicon Valley Watcher's Tom Foremski, links hidden behind words are one of the things he likes least about blogs: " That does not work, users want to know where the link will take them. It should be clearly labeled and not hidden." (Via WebProNews)

Blogger - User Interface Design, Human Computer Interaction (HCI), Ergonomics

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