June 1st, 2008 by Noam Ben Asher — Uncategorized
We have 5 diggers for the diggable posts.
I know I’m a digger, and Danny is a digger too.
Who are the mysterious three?
Are digging phantoms of the net?
For you I write this haiku post.
Might be interesting to some of you: Third International Conference on Design Principles and Practices
Berlin, Germany 15-17 February 2009
See@: http://www.Design-Conference.com
P.S. Don’t digg me
May 30th, 2008 by Danny — Uncategorized
Yahoo! Design Stencil Kit version 1.0 is available for OmniGraffle, Visio (XML), Adobe Illustrator (PDF and SVG), and Adobe Photoshop (PNG), Been checking it out, looks great for any UI designer.
Get it here!

May 13th, 2008 by Danny — Uncategorized
Google friend connect is all about making the user life easy, you can join any web site with your Google account, and any web site can have ready made social elements, like friends (subscribers) and comments.
The basic flow of the service is:
I want to accomplish a goal-> I see I can on a site-> I choose to register -> I am redirected to Google accounts-> I login (one click action) -> I share with friends -> I set settings -> I get back to the site to complete my task.
Google engineers have forgot some basic rules of web usability:
1. Most people have a goal in mind when entering a web site, Help people perform that goal as fast and as easy as possible.
Instead of one click registration to the site users are asked to take a long road to complete their goals with sharing, entering details and getting settings organized. If a user just wants to add a comment, this can be way to much for him.
2. Keep users within the context of their goal environment.
In order to register to a site, users are redirected to Google accounts. The originating site design is not kept as the interaction. Users can get easily confused and irritated by the sadden change of context. This problem can go away with time if usage of Google connect becomes frequent and users expect it to happen, but until then…
On the other hand, how hard was it to accomplish login within the original site environment, something like a widget box that they have there anyway.
Waiting to see facebook connect…
May 10th, 2008 by Danny — Uncategorized
User interface and user experience practitioners have a new blogs aggregator in town:
UI.altop.com
Altop.com (by Guy Kawasaki) is a "by topic" aggregator and they just opened the UI/UX topic page for the messes. The page follows most of the leading UI/UX blogs and in a clean and simple design.
What I miss in this page is the podcasts and videos follow up, but I believe it will follow shortly.
May 6th, 2008 by Danny — Uncategorized
I follow my RSS feeds on Google reader. I like it for the basic simplicity of it and for the complicated options it enables me to follow.
Today I got a first look of what a “share item with note” looks like:

As you can see - the Image is very small and not really clear.
So, I thought it’s me…
I tried going for the extended view (I use the list view):

What did Google do wrong?
Google enabled users to share an item (was able before) and add a personal aspect to it (note).
Google transferred a social element - Identity (a picture that represent me), that is very common on social websites and implemented it poorly.
A common method for creating user interfaces is copy the familiar.
In order to create a feel of familiarity UI practitioners copy from real life, or from digital elements that most users known before or still using.
So Google wants to become a social network, but why represent it with a 10 pixels on 10 pixels picture?
May 1st, 2008 by Danny — user experience, Interaction, Site Reviews
Lately I have been hooked on twitter- a service for micro blogging, and there is a lot of buzz about it nowadays.
The twitter personal page looks like a good example for simplicity, and the main content section is just that.
A Twitter profile has a very simple (first impression) interface:
There is the noticeable Logo, a big question "what are you doing?" and a big text box.
Below you see "twitts" of people I am following. Delicate tabs show the user the ways of interaction.
However, The rest of the page is not understandable at first - what are device updates? what are followers? what are following? what is the difference between them (facebook and such social networks require interaction to be two way).
Continue reading →
April 17th, 2008 by Noam Ben Asher — Conference
This year the CHI2008 event was in Florence, Italy. This was my first time in CHI and in Florence. Both interesting, but for me looking backwards now CHI was much more of an attraction. I was amazed by size of the event, so many UI experts in one place, how comes there are still UI problems out there? Continue reading →
April 7th, 2008 by Danny — user experience
Recently I got a look at this manual from apple - has a lot of good guidelines from the company that is known for its user experience.
Enjoy
March 29th, 2008 by Danny — user experience, Interaction, Site Reviews
A Name is an identity one can relate to, respond to, feel empathy to, and have a dialog with.
Web sites have been using their users names in numerous ways to increase their activity’s and emotional relation to their service.
Some of those ways:
- create an emotional connection and empathy.
- Increase user activity and involvement in activities.
- Ownership of information by a specific user within the service.
- Dialog between users.
- CRM - Get the user back to the service using email messages.
Continue reading →
March 27th, 2008 by Noam Ben Asher — Interaction
I really like the relatively new breeze coming from Google. Well off-course I’m using the search engine, but recently due to limited storage space on the university mail server I started forwarding my emails to GMail. It was a pleasure to find out I can still use Thunderbird (my email client) using POP3 at home and IMAP at the university (firewall issues…). Than I discovered Google Calendar and more surprisingly I found out I can synchronize it with with Lightning, a calendering task manager plug-in to Thunderbird (which I was using).
One day, not long ago I got an event invitation, probably generated using MS-Outlook. Happy to see that I can Accept or Decline from Thunderbird and amazed when it appeared correctly in my online Google calendar. One day before the meeting I got a nice reminder.

In the following hour or so, I got a mail from one of the attendees, politely thanking me for the reminder.
I DID NOT ASK FOR ANY MAILS TO THE OTHERS!. I’m the last one in the food chain of this meeting. This was a disappointment…
Probably the Thunderbird interface is not 100% aliened with Google’s, but still this should be my decision. So what should my workflow be?
Accepting the meeting on my email client, opening the browser, logging to my Google account, accessing the calender, finding the event, editing the event. This is too much.
I don’t need two interfaces to manage my appointments. One more scary thing, I didn’t fined where this option exists in Google calender. I could only find a link labeled “Email guests” and I’m too scared to click it…more emails might be send.
So from now on I will not accept meeting invitations but create my own, at least until someone will explain me how it works (Danny are you free?).
Some funny Internet culture trivia information, do you know what is “Godwin’s law”?
Read on here.