(contributed by KJ)

Wanted by the Police: A Good Interface
By KATIE HAFNER

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/11/technology/circuits/11cops.html?oref=login
&pagewanted=print&position=

SAN JOSE has a reputation as one of the safest large cities in the nation,
with the fewest police officers per capita.

Yet a number of the 1,000 officers in this city of 925,000 in the heart of
Silicon Valley have been worrying about their own safety of late. Since
June, the police department has been using a new mobile dispatch system that
includes a Windows-based touch-screen computer in every patrol car. But
officers have said the system is so complex and difficult to use that it is
jeopardizing their ability to do their jobs.

Officers complain that routine tasks are so difficult to perform that they
are discouraged from doing them. And they say that the most vital safety
feature - a "call for assistance" command that officers use when they are in
danger - is needlessly complicated.

"Do you think if you're hunkered down and someone's shooting at you in your
car, you're going to be able to sit there and look for Control or Alt or
Function?" said Sgt. Don DeMers, president of the San Jose Police Officers'
Association, the local union and the most vocal opponent of the new system.
"No, you're going to look for the red button."

Officers also say they were not consulted about the design of the user
interface - how information is presented and how commands are executed using
on-screen and keyboard buttons. Many have said they wish the department had
retained and upgraded the old system, in place since 1990.

Such complaints have a familiar ring. Anyone who encounters technology daily
- that is to say, just about everyone - has a story of new hardware or
software, at work or at home, that is poorly designed, hard to use and
seemingly worse than what it was intended to replace. Yet because the safety
of police officers and the public is involved, the problems in San Jose are
of particular concern.

At the heart of the dispute is the question of how much the technology
itself is to blame, how much is a training problem and how much can be
attributed to the predictable pains associated with learning something new.

Any new technology, whether it is a microwave oven or the controls of a
Boeing 777, has a learning curve. And often the user interface, the
all-important gateway between person and machine, is a dizzying array of
buttons or keys that have to be used in combinations. It can take weeks,
sometimes months, of training and adapting for people to become comfortable
with a new system.

Police department officials in San Jose have acknowledged that the
off-the-shelf system, which cost $4.7 million, has had some bugs, yet they
say the software vendor, Intergraph Corporation, of Huntsville, Ala., has
fixed many of them.

"The city and Intergraph have worked together to iron out the software and
work-flow issues that sometimes accompany the introduction of a new system,"
said Alice Dilbeck, vice president for customer services at Intergraph.

And at public safety agencies elsewhere in the country where similar
software has been introduced, employees have eventually grown used to the
new technology.

Still, questions and complaints remain, not only among patrol officers but
among dispatchers who say that with the new system, unlike the old, they are
unable to perform several tasks at one time.

With the system, officers in the field can receive orders, send messages,
write reports, call up maps of the city and, using the Global Positioning
System, see not only where they are but where other patrol cars are at any
given time.

When first installed, the system was unstable. A day or two after the new
system went into operation, it crashed, and for several days it was
periodically down. "That didn't engender a lot of trust," said Sergeant
DeMers of the police union.

Ms. Dilbeck acknowledged, "That was a really bad start."

When the system was running again, a number of bugs were discovered, said
Aaron Marcus, president of Aaron Marcus & Associates, a user-interface
design consulting firm in Berkeley, Calif., that studied the new system at
the request of the union.

Some of the map information, it turned out, was inaccurate, screens were
cluttered with unnecessary information, the on-screen type was difficult to
read and officers could not easily perform one of the most basic tasks - the
license-plate check.

"This is almost a casebook study of what not to do and how to do it wrong,"
Mr. Marcus said.

Perhaps the biggest misstep of all, Mr. Marcus said, was that the officers
themselves were not consulted beforehand, especially when it came to the
design of the interface.

Jakob Nielsen, a principal of the Nielsen Norman Group, a technology
consulting company in Fremont, Calif., agreed.

"It's a prescription for disaster to develop a big system without testing it
with users before it's launched," Mr. Nielsen said. "There are always issues
in the user interface that need to be smoothed over."

The San Jose police chief, Rob Davis, said that those who were in charge of
planning for the new system "have reviewed it and in retrospect would
probably agree that if they had involved more of the end users during the
planning phase it would have made the rollout easier."

Since the complaints first arose, Intergraph has fixed bugs and streamlined
some of the more cumbersome tasks such as the license plate checks. Ms.
Dilbeck and others have spent weeks at a time in San Jose working to
eliminate bugs.

"I'm getting very good feedback about the upgrades," Chief Davis said.

Part of the problem stemmed from the fact that the San Jose officers had
grown used to the city's 14-year-old text-based system.

"It's a debatable issue as to whether you should fix the old or go for a new
paradigm," Mr. Marcus said, "because the old software wasn't off the shelf,
it was customized."

The amount of training that was initially given to officers, three hours,
was considered by many to be inadequate. "You expect our officers to be able
to operate in life-and-death situations with three hours' training?"
Sergeant DeMers said.

Sgt. Thomas Navin, supervisor of the department's systems unit and the
person who has been most responsible for training on the mobile systems,
acknowledged that training was "bare-bones basic." Additional training has
since been offered.

But the fact that the system is based on Windows complicated the issue,
since not everyone was familiar with pull-down menus and other basic
features. "There are people who are Windows savvy and those who aren't,"
Sergeant Navin said. Officers in their late 50's and early 60's tend to
resist the new system more than younger officers do.

Also, officers were trained on desktop computers with track pads on the
keyboards, not the touch screens they would eventually be using.

Another point of controversy was the red Code 99 command, used when an
officer is in danger and needs help. Originally the system had one key for
Code 99, but it was later changed to a two-key combination because the
single button code was resulting in too many false alarms. Now it is the
two-key method that prompts some complaints.

Over all, the new system is an improvement over the old, some department
officials say, in part because it contains a mapping feature based on global
positioning data provided by the city. But the maps contain errors, Sergeant
DeMers said.

Officers say they are being distracted by the tasks they are expected to
perform on the new system when their full attention should be given to what
is happening outside the patrol car. Sergeant DeMers said one officer
recently was so distracted by what he was doing on the 12-inch touch screen
that he crashed into a parked car.

During a recent tour of the system with a reporter in the passenger's seat,
Sergeant Navin typed in a message to another officer, Sgt. David Bacigalupi,
asking his opinion of the Intergraph system. "You can't print what I think,"
came the officer's response.

Later, as Sergeant Navin drove through the streets of San Jose, his taps on
the screen inevitably led to some swerving, inadvertently bearing out his
colleagues' claims - even though he was clearly well versed with the ins and
outs of the system.

"In practical reality, especially when responding to an emergency call, they
have to do some of these things while en route," Mr. Marcus said.

The fact that the officers and police dispatchers were not consulted about
their preferences and requirements has come back to haunt the city. In July,
the union asked for meetings to discuss the new system, saying it was having
an adverse impact on officer safety. "Legally, they can't just implement
something like this unilaterally," said John Tennant, general counsel for
the union.

Even after some extensive tweaking, there still seem to be some fundamental
bugs, Mr. Marcus said. "Much of the design was incorporating a Windows
desktop graphical user interface with complex menu hierarchies, which just
doesn't make sense in a vehicle."

Dispatchers have been similarly unhappy, citing delays with the new system
that could endanger officers.

It takes longer to give officers information about the prior arrest record
of someone they have just caught, said Melissa Albrecht, a San Jose
dispatcher for 15 years. "Does that two extra minutes make a difference when
they're standing there with a felon?" she asked. "It could.'' In September,
Ms. Albrecht sent a six-page memorandum to the police chief listing her
concerns.

She credits Intergraph with many improvements. But the system still does not
allow dispatchers to perform several tasks simultaneously, and this causes
delays. "What they keep throwing at us is that the system works as designed,
and my question for them is, 'Does this design work for us?' " she said.

For perspective the San Jose department might do well to borrow a page from
a city to the south.

The San Diego Sheriff's Department has had the Intergraph touch-screen
system in place for six years, and although there were bugs and resistance
at first, the kinks have been ironed out and the deputies are now used to
it.

"Some of our people had never done anything with a computer," said Hanan
Harb, who manages the department's dispatch center. "We had to do basic
Windows training, and it's hard to make that leap if you're not computer
literate to begin with. It's a big learning curve." Now that people have
grown used to it, and now that this is what they know, "it's very easy for
them," Ms. Harb said.

Dr. Nielsen said the Chicago Police Department had similar problems in 1999
when it rolled out an ambitious computer system without having tested it
with on-the-beat police officers first.

"Chicago learned its lesson and now has a much better system, developed with
user involvement," Dr. Nielsen said. "It's sad that the San Jose Police
Department had to learn the same lesson all over again. Those who don't know
history are doomed to repeat it."



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