You've got it. Even with street names and addresses on the houses, navigation 
in ticky-tacky neighborhoods is tricky. Proper labeling of the different dialog 
boxes is essential - but, like the house addresses, is often inadequate. 

My question would be why have two login dialog boxes at all? Are they being 
generated by the same program? If so, then shame on the designers for poor 
design. If not, then shame on the designers for not anticipating (dare I say 
testing?) this case. Usability testing is an expensive way to educated 
designers - or tech writers - but it sure beats hearing about problems from 
real users.

Dick Margulis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: This is a tale about closely observing 
the behavior of a sophisticated 
user...

It's a sleet day today. That is, I get to enjoy having my sweetie pie 
home this Valentine's Day because she has closed her office, thanks to 
the disgusting weather.

She was just having a problem with her brand new (XP, not Vista) 
computer and asked me to take a look. She was trying to sign on to the 
server at her office, something she had done regularly on her previous 
computer with no difficulty.

The particular problem was that she got to a user authentication dialog 
that had the wrong user name filled in. On her previous computer, this 
dialog had the correct user name filled in, and she wanted the new 
computer to behave the same way, saving her the trouble of retyping the 
user name each time.

The authentication box (provided by the remote server, I believe) had a 
user name and password fields and OK, Cancel, and "Options >>" buttons. 
(The last button actually didn't do anything interesting.)

So I said, all right, click Cancel. This brought her back to a 
similar-looking dialog (almost identical, really, except for the dialog 
title) on her own machine, the purpose of which was to make the 
connection to the remote server. It, too, had user name and password 
field, OK, Cancel, and "Options >>" buttons. In this case, the Options 
button opened a new dialog where she had the opportunity to change the 
default user name. Problem solved.

But here's what I learned: The design ideal of an integrated, consistent 
visual environment can itself introduce confusion. If everything looks 
alike, it's hard to keep track of just where you are. On the other hand, 
if controls that serve different functions have different appearances, 
you're more likely to have a clue. This is something architects 
discovered decades ago. If the little boxes on the hillside are not only 
all made of ticky tacky but also painted the same color, it's easy for 
visitors to get lost on their way to a friend's house. If there are pink 
ones and blue ones and green ones and yellow ones, visitors stand at 
least a quarter of a chance.

Anyway, this is just something to keep in mind if you're involved in the 
GUI design process for an application. Tufte's dictum is to use the 
smallest _effective_ difference. If the difference isn't effective in 
terms of user behavior, it's too small.

Dick
http://ampersandvirgule.blogspot.com/


______________________________________________

Author Help files and create printed documentation with Doc-To-Help.
New release adds Team Authoring Support, enhanced Web-based help
technology and PDF output. Learn more at www.doctohelp.com/tcp.


DOCUMENTATION & TRAINING WEST 07: THE USER EXPERIENCE

April 18-21, 2007 ~ Vancouver BC ~ Marriott Pinnacle ~ free city tour
40+ sessions * free workshops * free iPod offer * www.doctrain.com
_______________________________________________

Technical Communication Professionals

Post a message to the list: email [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Subscribe, unsubscribe, archives, account options, list info: 
http://techcommpros.com/mailman/listinfo/tcp_techcommpros.com
Subscribe (email): send a blank message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe (email): send a blank message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Need help? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Get the TCP whole experience! http://www.techcommpros.com


 
---------------------------------
Access over 1 million songs - Yahoo! Music Unlimited.
______________________________________________

Author Help files and create printed documentation with Doc-To-Help.
New release adds Team Authoring Support, enhanced Web-based help
technology and PDF output. Learn more at www.doctohelp.com/tcp.


DOCUMENTATION & TRAINING WEST 07: THE USER EXPERIENCE

April 18-21, 2007 ~ Vancouver BC ~ Marriott Pinnacle ~ free city tour
40+ sessions * free workshops * free iPod offer * www.doctrain.com
_______________________________________________

Technical Communication Professionals

Post a message to the list: email [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Subscribe, unsubscribe, archives, account options, list info: 
http://techcommpros.com/mailman/listinfo/tcp_techcommpros.com
Subscribe (email): send a blank message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe (email): send a blank message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Need help? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Get the TCP whole experience! http://www.techcommpros.com

Reply via email to