Stretching Your User Interface Design Muscles
A follow up to my previous
post on innovation in user interface design:
- If you want to keep up with cutting edge thinking on
technology - in a very approachable, effective format - ReadWriteWeb is a must for
your feed reader. I'm constantly amazed by the number of solid
articles they generate every week. Here's one from a few weeks ago
with a series of video examples of imaginative thinking about user
input:
- Another ReadWriteWeb
article, and this one relates well to the Stephen
Anderson presentation I linked to before.
It talks about user interactions (web forms) that empathize with and
engage the person working with the site. Excellent examples of
usability "in the wild":
- (via Aggregated
Intelligence) A very effective way of designing any interaction with
data (web form, application dialog box, even a paper report) is by prototyping.
I have long favored MS Excel for working out database designs and
report layouts; it's very simple way for end
users to capture what they want to see, quickly rearranging and
adjusting until it is just right. For on-screen dialogs, try
PowerPoint; the second link below takes you to a "toolkit" of GUI
components that let you work up sample screens / user interactions
very quickly, using the comfortable environment of PowerPoint.
Another option might be Visio - I've used versions of that package
that included shape templates with lots of user interface widgets.
Bottom line - it's a lot easier to sketch something out than to have
to actually build something "real".
Also from the first article above ... if you don't think there's
a difference between corporate IT UI and the consumer Internet - does
this ring true for you?
