Usability Quote of the Day

March 21, 2010

Software design is the act of determining the user's experience with a piece of software. It has nothing to do with how the code works inside, or how big or small the code is. The designer's task is to specify completely and unambiguously the user's whole experience. -- David Liddle, From Bringing Design to Software, edited by Terry Winograd, 1996   (via interaction-design.org)

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Tango-A Web application with no back button

Don Norman on a new form of interface ...

"Normally I don't comment upon on link to blogs that talk about me or my work, but this one was too much fun to ignore. One of my Nielsen Norman group clients is H & R Block. I recently helped them develop a new form of interaction for their income tax software, one that was so different than their standard approach that they decided to bring it out as its own separate brand: Tango.

The Vice president who initiated the project is Dave Murray. Here is his block on the experience: No Back Button, Dammit!" (sic). Yup, I laid down a number of design axioms for them. Murray started out by insisting this would be an "Emotional Design." Good way to start. I added:

* No back button
* No navigation
* A clear Conceptual Model
* Error messages that informed, that were reassuring and helpful. No blame
* The product is fun (as much as income tax can be fun)

Murray added:

* Software is a story (shades of Brenda Laurel: Interface as theater)

We all added:

* The product as a persona.
* Movement and tempo as important components of the experience."    (Continued via Don Norman's jnd.org)    [Usability Resources]

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

<< Home
.