When using the iPhone (or any Smartphone), why is it that you don’t feel the screen is too small or constraining when you watch a video as against using it to type in an email? Is it the movement on the screen or the addition of the Z-axis that adds depth and expands the screen space? Or is it that you are just a passive consumer of information and don’t necessarily interact with the screen? Using the device for games has a similar effect. You forget that the device has boundaries and you are totally immersed and engaged in the drama of the game environment -more like being actually drawn into the screen, and being sucked into the third dimension.
On the other hand, while trying to type something, it’s a 2D surface and the boundaries are more pronounced as you type a relatively long email and you tend to feel constrained in the space. More words on the screen emphasize the small screen size. While browsing web pages, you zoom in and don’t get the entire picture and that could make it feel a bit constraining too.
Do the boundaries vanish the more immersive the environment is?
How can typing a text be made more immersive so that boundaries fade away?
In countries like India where people are constantly being exposed to complexity - be it in everyday way finding or visual complexity of the buildings, they are constantly searching and navigating a complex landscape to find information they are looking for. On the other hand someone living in a developed nation where things are always aligned and in order, a simple shift in alignment can make way finding hard.
Do people from places with visual complexity and amorphous development (buildings for example) tend to naturally like complexity and those from places with a more structured development tend to gravitate towards simplicity?
Does your culture and context affect your perception of the simplicity and ease of use of a UI?
]]>When a person is navigating a UI, he always wants to be aware of where he is, to give him a context. At any point when he is lost, he starts looking for clues, something that tells him where he is, and where he can go from there.
It’s hard enough we have to search for clues in the real world. Can’t we make things a little easier in the virtual world and design in such a way that there’s no need for clues, but if needed, they are easy to find.
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Online slide shows are they something that are useful especially when there is quite a bit of text to read in every slide?
Isn’t it user friendly to just provide a navigation that lets the user to advance from one slide to the other instead of having an autoplay option where the screen refreshes when the user is halfway through reading the text?
Recent experience at Forbes.com is what made me write this.
As I was watching the slide show and reading the information the screen would suddenly refresh and advance to a new slide. If I were to pause, I’d have to hit the ‘stop’ button and take my time to read without the worry of the stop clock ticking and the screen refreshing. Now, when I advance to the next slide, I assumed that since I hit the ‘stop’ button earlier, I’d have the option to control the slides manually. But no, the screen refreshes again. This meant that every time I wanted extra time to read or view a slide, I’d hit ‘stop’ in each slide while also advancing to the next one. Shouldn’t we be more considerate about the user?
Suggestion:
If we could separate the navigation to a time-based autoplay and a manual mode, it would tremendously help.
Fig.1
Fig.2
Client:
A software company specializing in automation and creating simplified and intuitive user interfaces…
Taglines
We’re not about just Bits ‘n Bytes
We simplify your life!
Life is already full of complications
Why not automate some,
And you’ll get time to live
Time is precious.
Spend it wisely on significant things
Automate the rest.
We spend our time, so that you can free yours for things that matter in life.
-Software Solutions
(a picture of a 8 year old with her mom, sharing stories of the day, at the park…(any intimate moment with friends family…) and the above quotes inconspicuously lining the base of the image)
We speak good old plain English
Translating Human language to Machine language…We’ll do the talking.
Interfacing made simple
Talk you’re language, we’ll try and understand you.
We sell time
You need to be just able to read plain English to use our software
Sometimes, it’s only plain old simple English it takes to communicate.
]]>I still am in wonder…
]]>Kudos to the power of copy! sometimes all it takes is good old plain english!!!