Hi Jason, I was just using that as an example, that users may prefer one way 
over the other, and so I wish to offer them a choice. It would be nice if 
Facebook offered the choice!

See my original email - it needs a name because the word modal is not one that 
I think users would be familiar with. I need something to differentiate between 
opening the form in a separate page and in a modal form, preferably something 
short and to the point.

Thanks,
Stephen
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jason Grant 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, July 20, 2011 5:49 PM
  Subject: Re: [WSG] Modal forms - what to call them?


  Stephen,

  I think we are talking about different context with regards to Facebook 
example. 


  You don't really get side by side options on Facebook to open in separate 
page or open in modal window. 

  Why does this thing need to have a 'name' anyway? 


  Cheers,

  Jason 


  On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 5:43 PM, Stevio <[email protected]> wrote:

    User choice basically. They may prefer to see more of a form in its own 
page, or they may prefer to use a modal form to add the record.

    If JavaScript is disabled, the system still works fine with the non-modal 
form option.

    Take Facebook's current implementation of photos for example. A while back 
they introduced a modal viewing box for images. However, if you click F5 to 
refresh Firefox, you go back to the old style viewing of the image in it's own 
page. Often I do this because I prefer it, other times I persist with their 
viewing box.

    As for a user-friendly name for the modal link, so far I've come up with 
"coolbox", "float", or using an icon with an arrow.

    Any better suggestions?

    Thanks,
    Stephen


    ----- Original Message ----- From: "Hassan Schroeder" 
<[email protected]>
    To: <[email protected]>
    Sent: Wednesday, July 20, 2011 5:18 PM
    Subject: Re: [WSG] Modal forms - what to call them?




      On 7/20/11 8:45 AM, Stevio wrote:

        I am working on a CMS and within it, when a user wishes to add a 
record, I give them two options:
        1) Add record - this goes to a new web page with a form.
        2) Add record modally - this brings up a modal dialog box containing 
the form which allows them
        to add the record without leaving the page they were on (this page 
lists the current records).
        This uses jQuery. Once they add the record, the list of records is 
updated using AJAX.



        However, I would like something shorter and simpler than 'pop-up dialog 
box'. Any thoughts?


      Just curious -- why offer a choice?

      Why not just offer the modal version if JS is enabled and the other
      if not?

      What is the user benefit of the non-modal option? And is it enough
      to justify introducing an extraneous decision into the workflow?

      Will the target user understand the implications of the choices and
      pick one unhesitatingly? Or think "eh? what?"  :-)

      Just askin' ... 





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  -- 
  Jason Grant BSc [Hons], MSc [Hons]
  Customer Experience Architect
  Flexewebs Ltd. 

  www.flexewebs.com 
  [email protected] 
  +44 (0)7748 591 770

  www.flexewebs.com/semantix
  www.twitter.com/flexewebs 
  www.linkedin.com/in/flexewebs



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