Hi Bjorn, 2012/5/9 Björn Balazs <[email protected]>
> Hi all, > > just a short additional note - a more detailed answer will follow in the > next > days: > > Please do not mix up user testing user research. > :D funny, I was convinced this whole time that you were talking about user testing oh well... > > RESEARCH is about understanding (and creating artifacts accordingly) who > the > users are, what they (want to) use the product for, what goals they want to > reach, what criteria apply to a successfull interaction, what prior > experience > they have, where they will use the tool,.... This can perfectly be done in > distributed teams using web tools. We can reach users all over the world. > Past > experience in Libre Office has shown that it is easy to get feedback from > more > than 10000 actual users within days. And these were just first tries... > What tools do you suggest to use? Should every project we work on be preceded by a survey on the topic? TESTING is about presenting users with possible solutions, and watching how > they solve given tasks. This usually is extremely difficult to do with > voluntary development teams, as you would need test rooms, local, but still > representative - perhaps even paid - participants etc. There might be some > room for this on fairs or similar events, but I would rather not be too > enthusiastic about testing. In my experience the value of testing is over > estimated. Most user tests actually do post-hoc research. And the other way > around, I found that tests following projects that did decent research did > not > reveal any significant new insights. > I'd still like to do user testing if we could. I'm not sure if we'd need special test rooms with local participants. Actually, I think just seeing how people use the software would help, and that could be done simply by people videotaping their friends/relatives according to some directions we give them and putting the videos up on YouTube. It wouldn't be the most professional thing to do, but it would undoubtedly help us understand our users more, more than surveys or usage tracking extensions. It might be especially interesting to watch how users coming from Office or iWork work with our UI. (I guess that still falls under the umbrella of user research, though.) > Summing it up: Lets do extensive user research - both because in Free > Software > we simply will never be in the situation to do extensive testing and > because > it is the more sustainable anyhow. > > As a sidenote: icons are something that can actually be user tested easily > via > the web, here research rather does not help that much in contrast. These > different ways that are appropriate to reach our goals are part of the > experience I would like to share with this group. > This also is one of the > reasons I do not think we need a standard workflow the way it is defined at > the moment, but standard artefacts (see above), that need to be used in > smart > ways to reach the different goals we have. I agree that we need some standard artefacts, but I disagree we should let go of our workflow. While it isn't perfect by any measure, it seems to be a step in the right direction. I've been subscribed to this list for about two years now, maybe longer, and I've been sorely missing a standard way of working. It seemed that developers weren't really interested in the design team, whiteboards were a mess of unfinished ideas that could never be carried out to completion, any sort of UI work was fruitless, and we weren't really collaborating -- everyone (including me) was doing his/her own thing. I'm afraid that if we didn't have any sort of defined workflow, we'd revert back to the chaos that came before, even with the various artefacts defined. If you have a suggestion for a better workflow, please do voice your opinion. -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to [email protected] Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/design/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted
