Hi,
I'm sympathetic to the argument that Nielsen makes about reset.
One thing to consider, however, is that he's arguing from a point of view that
differentiates applications from web pages -- that when people are using the
web, they are in a different kind of environment from applications,
On 10/25/2010 08:23 AM, Ben Dubrovsky wrote:
Hi,
I'm sympathetic to the argument that Nielsen makes about reset.
One thing to consider, however, is that he's arguing from a point of view that differentiates
applications from web pages -- that when people are using the web, they are in a
Adam Young wrote:
On 10/25/2010 08:23 AM, Ben Dubrovsky wrote:
Hi,
I'm sympathetic to the argument that Nielsen makes about reset.
One thing to consider, however, is that he's arguing from a point of
view that differentiates applications from web pages -- that when
people are using the web,
On 10/25/2010 10:42 AM, Rob Crittenden wrote:
Adam Young wrote:
On 10/25/2010 08:23 AM, Ben Dubrovsky wrote:
Hi,
I'm sympathetic to the argument that Nielsen makes about reset.
One thing to consider, however, is that he's arguing from a point of
view that differentiates applications from web
Adam Young wrote:
http://www.useit.com/alertbox/2416.html
Since we have line level undo (which he advocates) perhaps the reset
button is not worth while. Since the user can reload the page at
will, there is a built in reset button already, and there slight risk
of hitting the wrong
On Fri, 22 Oct 2010 21:19:16 -0400
Adam Young ayo...@redhat.com wrote:
http://www.useit.com/alertbox/2416.html
Since we have line level undo (which he advocates) perhaps the reset
button is not worth while. Since the user can reload the page at
will, there is a built in reset button
http://www.useit.com/alertbox/2416.html
Since we have line level undo (which he advocates) perhaps the reset
button is not worth while. Since the user can reload the page at will,
there is a built in reset button already, and there slight risk of
hitting the wrong button may in fact