It is all about usability! Usability of GUIs you see every minute you spend at your PC: applications usability reviews, websites usability reviews, Flash usability. Tips and tricks, my comments and suggestions. Lets make this world usable together ;)

Friday, September 22, 2006

New Yahoo Email Interface or don't think that AJAX is panacea!

Not so long ago Yahoo introduced new email interface. It is AJAX based and available at: new.mail.yahoo.com PC Magazine reviewed it as : "The new interface is stunning in its simplicity and ease of use."(09/20/2005 ). Great! "ease of use" means usability. Lets look inside. I will not describe the good features of this new interface, and praise Yahoo developers :) You may read all this in numerous online reviews, like PC Magazine. I will just enumerate the things that are not usable or things that may be better (do you remember? Our aim to make this ugly WWW better!) - It is not possible to customize main email actions buttons. e.g.(1) I never use "Print" and I always remove it from my email clients tollbars. e.g.(2) "Move" button. Do you use it? It is easier to drag and drop selected emails to desired folder. And new Yahoo email UI supports d'n'd. - Where is "Compose" button? I spent some second searching it. I see "Reply", "Froward", "Move" and others. No "Compose" button in main toolbar! Oh, it is at top left. Next to "Check mail" button! - Calendar as well as notes opens in a new window (Firefox 1.5.0.7). Why not in a new tab next to "Inbox" tab? - "Find messages" search box again at top left. No comments! Conclusions: AJAX gives great abilities for UI developers. But in the rush for modern technologies we should pay more attention on UIs.

Sunday, September 17, 2006

Top 5 usability books

Prioritizing Web Usability by Jakob Nielsen (Author), Hoa Loranger (Author) In 2000, Jakob Nielsen, the world’s leading expert on Web usability, published a book that changed how people think about the Web—Designing Web Usability (New Riders). Many applauded. A few jeered. But everyone listened. The best-selling usability guru is back and has revisited his classic guide, joined forces with Web usability consultant Hoa Loranger, and created an updated companion book that covers the essential changes to the Web and usability today. Prioritizing Web Usability is the guide for anyone who wants to take their Web site(s) to next level and make usability a priority! Through the authors’ wisdom, experience, and hundreds of real-world user tests and contemporary Web site critiques, you’ll learn about site design, user experience and usability testing, navigation and search capabilities, old guidelines and prioritizing usability issues, page design and layout, content design, and more!

Don't Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability

by Steve Krug (Author) People won't use your web site if they can't find their way around it. Whether you call it usability, ease-of-use, or just good design, companies staking their fortunes and their futures on their Web sites are starting to recognize that it's a bottom-line issue. In Don't Make Me Think, usability expert Steve Krug distills his years of experience and observation into clear, practical--and often amusing--common sense advice for the people in the trenches (the designers, programmers, writers, editors, and Webmasters), the people who tell them what to do (project managers, business planners, and marketing people), and even the people who sign the checks. Krug's clearly explained, easily absorbed principles will help you sleep better at night knowing that all the hard work going into your site is producing something that people will actually want to use.

Designing Web Usability : The Practice of Simplicity by Jakob Nielsen (Author)

Creating Web sites is easy. Creating sites that truly meet the needs and expectations of the wide range of online users is quite another story. In Designing Web Usability: The Practice of Simplicity, renowned Web usability guru Jakob Nielsen shares his insightful thoughts on the subject. Packed with annotated examples of actual Web sites, this book sets out many of the design precepts all Web developers should follow. This guide segments discussions of Web usability into page, content, site, and intranet design. This breakdown skillfully isolates for the reader many subtly different challenges that are often mixed together in other discussions. For example, Nielsen addresses the requirements of viewing pages on varying monitor sizes separately from writing concise text for "scanability." Along the way, the author pulls no punches with his opinions, using phrases like "frames: just say no" to immediately make his feelings known. Fortunately, his advise is some of the best you'll find. One of the unique aspects of this title is the use of actual statistics to buttress the author's opinions on various techniques and technologies. He includes survey results on sizes of screens, types of queries submitted to search portals, response times by connection type and more. This book is intended as the first of two volumes--focusing on the "what." The author promises a follow-up title that will show the "hows" and, based on this installation, we can't wait. --Stephen W. Plain

Designing Interfaces [ILLUSTRATED] by Jenifer Tidwell (Author)

Designing a good interface isn't easy. Users demand software that is well-behaved, good-looking, and easy to use. Your clients or managers demand originality and a short time to market. Your UI technology -- Web applications, desktop software, even mobile devices -- may give you the tools you need, but little guidance on how to use them well. UI designers over the years have refined the art of interface design, evolving many best practices and reusable ideas. If you learn these, and understand why the best user interfaces work so well, you too can design engaging and usable interfaces with less guesswork and more confidence. Designing Interfaces captures those best practices as design patterns -- solutions to common design problems, tailored to the situation at hand. Each pattern contains practical advice that you can put to use immediately, plus a variety of examples illustrated in full color. You'll get recommendations, design alternatives, and warnings on when not to use them. Each chapter's introduction describes key design concepts that are often misunderstood, such as affordances, visual hierarchy, navigational distance, and the use of color. These give you a deeper understanding of why the patterns work, and how to apply them with more insight. A book can't design an interface for you -- no foolproof design process is given here -- but Designing Interfaces does give you concrete ideas that you can mix and recombine as you see fit. Experienced designers can use it as a sourcebook of ideas. Novice designers will find a roadmap to the world of interface and interaction design, with enough guidance to start using these patterns immediately.

Homepage Usability: 50 Websites Deconstructed by Jakob Nielsen (Author), Marie Tahir (Author) While there is a plethora of books available that provide tips on Web design, most authors leave a significant gap between the theory and practice--a gap that is left up to the reader to fill. Homepage Usability: 50 Websites Deconstructed boldly steps into that gap with specific observations and suggestions backed with solid quantitative analysis. This book focuses only on home page design as the most important point of presence for any Web site. This definitive work is coauthored by Jakob Nielsen--the accepted industry expert in Web usability--and Marie Tahir, an expert in user profiling. Their collaboration has produced a guide of such rare practical benefit that Web designers will likely wear out their first copy scouring the pages to savor every last morsel of wisdom. The book begins with a chapter of precise guidelines that serve as a checklist of the features and functionality to include on your home page. The specifics found in categories such as "revealing content through examples" and "graphic design" will quickly hook you and whet your appetite for more. These guidelines are followed up with hard statistics and an examination of the ominous Jakob's Law: "Users spend most of their time on other sites than your site." Here you'll find some interesting statistics about how various conventions like search, privacy policies, and logos are used. All this leads up to the showcase element of the book--a systematic deconstruction of 50 of the most popular home pages on the Web. The authors painstakingly pick apart each in an uncompromising autopsy of usability. Each site is graphically analyzed for its use of real estate and summarized with the frankness only found from true experts. Then each section of the home page is bulleted and analyzed for potential improvements. It's a bold move to offer a critique of industry-standard Web sites such as Yahoo, CNET, and eBay, but the authors have done such a fine job that the designers of those sites will surely make reading this book a high priority. For the rest of us, this work will serve as an invaluable gospel. --Stephen W. Plain

Friday, September 15, 2006

Firefox Productions (Yet Another Bad Webpage)

They will design your site with "ADVANCED WEB SITE FEATURES", such Java applet navigation bars and crinkled paper backgrounds. Please don't develop such kind of websites! Really don't.....

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CSS tips and tricks!

Some great tips and tricks from CSS Guru. For those of you that are new to CSS or experts always looking for a new trick, here are some of things he does on a regular basis to keep his code organized (kind of).

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Top 50 Helpful Web Design Resources

A list of top 50 design resources with descriptions. Some of the resources include CSS galleries, usability sites, blogs, web standards sites, tools, color wheels and typography sites.

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Web Usability Expert Jakob Nielsen on AJAX

Matt Mickiewicz interviews Jakob Nielsen, author of the brand new book "Prioritizing Web Usability", about AJAX, usability's close link to keyword advertising, and some of the advertising formats we're seeing around the Web today.

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5 principles to building a better blog

In-depth article that discusses 5 major principles to buil a better blog. The article throws light on usability, improving content, visibility, uniqueness, and listening to your readers (getting feedback).

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Usability of AJAX Drag and Drop Technique

Do you know what is "AJAX Drag and Drop"? Or what sites use "AJAX Drag and Drop" technique? I agree, it is hard to remember (in fact I am 100% sure you can't answer right now). But if I tell you www.google.com/ig uses AJAX Drag & Drop you will be surprised. All know what it is but some know how it is called. The same is for Google. A lot of developers used AJAX D'n'D before Google but only Google made "piece of art" and started global paranoia about this. Microsoft made it is own version of the same thing: www.start.com/3/. Looks similar? Yes! But try to move blocks, then try to move blocks on Google's page. Do you see the difference? And it is huge! I can't say that Microsoft made something ugly and unusable. Of course not. When I tried to move blocks first, I was confused of the thing that I have the block dragged under the pointer of my mouse and at the same time it is appeared on that place where I am going to put it. So I had the clear feeling that I place the block on the another text that was not moved and I don't know what will happen when I release the mouse button. That is really, really bad. Another issue: how to drag? MS made a very light background under block titles, so it is hard to find the place you may drag. You are always afraid of accidental click on block title and getting away from that page :) This made you nervous and strained. Stop! The Web 2.0 must make you happy and relaxed! Resume is very simple: AJAX D'n'd is a good and very usable technology. Google proved that. But be very careful implementing it in order not to make Microsoft errors.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Usability datalogger version 3.1 released!

Hi usability paranoids! Good news today. Userfocus ltd upgarded their great tool. Do you use Microsoft Excel to analyze the results of your usability tests? If yes, this tool absolutely for you! It allows to measure task completion rates, analyse questionnaire data, and summarise participant comments. It even includes a timer so you can measure time-on-task. Sounds great? The key features of the version 3.0 are: - Free of charge: Dataloggger is freeware. It is distributed under a CCL. - Cross-platform: MAC users hands up! It is a PC and Macintosh-compatible Microsoft Excel file (requires Microsoft Excel to run). - Customisable: You can enter participant details, task names, task order, specify pre- and post-test interview questions and include your own satisfaction questionnaire. - Regularly updated: Now at version 3.0. (What's new in this version?) - Scalable: Can be used for up to 20 participants and 20 tasks. Do you really need more? - Provides real-time data analysis. - Speeds up report writing: Provides a summary of pre- and post-test questions and observations organised according to question and task to simplify data analysis. You may download this great tool there: http://www.userfocus.co.uk/resources/datalogger_getlink.html

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Top 71 CSS Menus Navigation Tabs

This is the first my post there. And I would like to share with you a good link to 71 CSS manus nad navigation tabs. That man did a great job collecting resources. Most of them have articles and tutorials. Hey! It is a high time to make this WWW better! Is it usable or not? It is up to you to decide. http://www.econsultant.com/web-developer/css-menus-navigation-tabs/