Usability Quote of the Day

May 23, 2012

There's something very odd going on here. If designers made completely unrealistic assumptions about the physical world when designing technology, then we would blame them (and likely sue them) for technical incompetence. Yet when they make grossly unrealistic assumptions about human nature... we don't blame the designers, we blame the unfortunate people who are just trying to do what the design requires. -- Kim Vicente, The Human Factor, p. 45.    (via interaction-design.org)

Friday, June 24, 2005

Emails for small screens

We are getting closer to a reasonable UX for small screens ...

"This is wild. Motorola has come up with an answer to reading long emails on a cellphone or PDA with a small screen – software that automatically creates a synopsis of the long text, reports New Scientist.

"The new summarising software first discards sentences that are less than 5 words or more than 50. Then it looks for sentences containing words that frequently crop up in the text, or which the owner has added to a preference list.

Finally it sifts sentences which contain telltale words and phrases like “all in all”, “so to sum up” and “for example”. The few remaining sentences that fit all the criteria are pulled from the long message, stitched together and shown on screen.

But one risk if the system doesn’t perform as people expect is that important messages could be deleted without being fully read. “By the way, you’re fired,” might slip through the net, for example".   continued ...   (Via textually.org)

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

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

<< Home
.