Usability Quote of the Day

March 14, 2010

The computer can be thought of from the perspective of its technology [...] from the field of computer science. Or it can be thought of as a social tool, a structure that will change social interaction and social policy, for better or for worse. It can be thought of as a personal assistant, where the goals and intentions of the user become of primary concern. It can be viewed from the experience of the user, a view that changes considerably with the task, the person, the design of the system. The filed of human-computer interaction needs all these views, all these issues, and more besides. -- Stephen Draper and Donald Norman. In "User Centered System Design" (1986) p. 1   (via interaction-design.org)

Monday, June 20, 2005

Large Users Hope for Broader Adoption of Usability Standard

Usability reporting for software products would put a new emphisis on UI ...

"Badly designed software is costing businesses millions of dollars annually because it's difficult to use, requires extensive training and support, and is so frustrating that many end users underutilize applications, say IT officials at companies such as The Boeing Co. and Fidelity Investments.

Despite those problems, most CIOs remain unaware of a 3-year-old standard designed to help IT managers compare the usability of software products, Boeing's Keith Butler and Fidelity's Thomas Tullis both said last week.

But they and others believe that will change once the guidelines for reporting usability test results are approved as a worldwide standard by the International Standards Organization in Geneva. The ISO's technology standards committee voted late last month to accept the standard, which is known as the Common Industry Format for Usability Test Reports, or CIF.

CIOs and other IT executives need to ask vendors for CIF-compliant reports as part of their requests for proposals on software contracts, according to participants in the standards initiative."   continued ...   (Via Computerworld)

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

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