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Re: Options and choises rant


From: Dennis Leeuw
Subject: Re: Options and choises rant
Date: Sun, 15 Jan 2006 13:41:06 +0100
User-agent: Debian Thunderbird 1.0.2 (X11/20051002)

Richard Frith-Macdonald wrote:
Apparently even microsoft have partially recognised this ... I recently followed a link to a news item about their latest release of 'office' in which it was said they did lot's of market research to find out what new features people would like ... and found that over 90% of the requested features were already in the software. The conclusion they drew from this was that they needed a new, context sensitive, user interface design to allow people to find features more easily. I think they only got that partially right ... things like ms-office (and now open-office) are horribly bloated and need to be broken up and modularised, improving the gui is a good step, but it's not enough. A lot of stuff should be completely removed from core applications and some sort of 'howto' tool should be devised to use AI principles to help people find the right tool for the job. Having a context sensitive gui within a single tool is a mistake ... we are much better at handling consistent interfaces rather than dynamically changing user interfaces, so if we are going to have to switch to handle a new task we want a radical ui change so we *know* we are handling a new task, and while we are operating within one tool we do not want the user interface changing.

This sounds a lot like the KISS principle. Small apps that do one thing right, and other apps for other tasks.

But just to get my mind straight. Let's assume the famous Office discussion, and let us make it even more simpel and only use the document creation part. I think one thing that GNUstep handles right is color and font management. It opens a panel, which is a "standalone" object (or app if your prefer) that deals exclusively with the task it was designed for. Do you mean this kind of design when you talk about bundles and a modularised design?


PS.
I've read that research suggests 7 items as a maximum that people (in general) can readily keep in mind, so even a menu with ten items is probably longer than desirable.

Nice... didn't know that. My girlfriend initially suggested 5, which I thought was way too little... but apperently I should have listened. She was much closer to the 7 then I was... :)

Dennis

--
"It is not necessary to change.
 After all, survival is not mandatory."
        Dr. W. Edwards Deming




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