#uiux

dredmorbius@joindiaspora.com

Dumb Phone

Elsewhere a friend laments:

The frequency with which I need my email and a notebook while I'm on the phone makes integrated devices foolish.

I'd covered that point a few years ago in a larger essay on the tyranny of the minimum viable user:

It's also interesting to consider what the operating environment of earlier phones was -- because it exceeded the device itself.

A business-use phone of, say, the 1970s, existed in a loosely-integrated environment comprising:

  • The user
  • The phone itself
  • A Rolodex or addressbook / contacts list
  • The local PBX -- the business's dedicated internal phone switch.
  • A secretary or switchboard operator, serving also as a message-taking (voice-to-text), screening, redirect, directory, interactive voice response, and/or calendaring service
  • A desk calendar
  • A phone book
  • A diary or organiser
  • Scratch paper

Critically: these components operated simultaneously and independently of the phone.

A modern business, software, or smartphone system may offer some, or even all, of these functions, but frequently:

  • They aren't available whilst a call is in process
  • They have vastly less capability or flexibility than the systems they replaced

https://old.reddit.com/r/dredmorbius/comments/69wk8y/the_tyranny_of_the_minimum_viable_user/

There's also the increasingly evident problem that having all your critical data on a communications device is a fundamental and intractable risk. The dis-integrated business telephony environment of the 1950s--1990s maintained data isolation between elements. Telephone numbers served as the reasonably-viable data-exchange-and-linking interface between components (map a name or address to a number, enter the number on a calendar or correspondence, etc.).

It's almost as if putting your filing system, personal diary, correspondence, photo album, and directory on a surveillance and exfiltration device was a Bad Idea.

And not just from a UI/UX / accessibility perspective.

It turns out that a chief affordance of the old POTS landline telephone was the air gap between it and everything else inside your office / home.

(We can talk about the solicitations, robocalls, and phishing issues separately.)

#telephony #telephones #risk #AirGap #data #DataAreLiability #UIUX #Usability #SmartPhones #DumbPhones #computers #communications #privacy #security #surveillance

dredmorbius@joindiaspora.com

Anyone else find Blogger's "Dynamic Templates" utterly impossible to read?

I occasionally find myself pointed at a Blogger site that's using the "dynamic view template" designs. Usually my first indication of this is that the site has no content in it. Oh. Go enable Javascript to view basic Web text....

OK, now ... let's save this to Readability (for better or worse, my present Web content archival system).

Nothing shows up.

OK, let's go back to the page. Wups. Whatever entry it was I had been reading is now replaced with .... something else. And back-arrow navigation is broken.

Needless to say, by this point in the game, my interest in reading whatever had driven me there in the first place is ... effectively nil.

Add to this the usual horrors: fonts mis-sized to my reading preferences, persistent horizontal page headers / footers chopping into the viewable area. And ... well, it's not a pleasant experience.

Oddly enough, this is yet another Google property. What is with Google's anti-Midas touch that turns every Web property it comes into contact with to UI/UX shit?

Not to mention: the fact that no text renders without JS is ... a violation of Google's own spidering rules, no?

Unless there's some Sooper Sekrit URL incantation that robots are directed to ...

Hrm ...

Other than the sitemap, not that I can tell (and the sitemap appears to put all text into the site's feeds).

To put a face on this crime, Umair Haque's "On Global Prosperity blog is what prompts this specific rant.

#blogger #css #javascript #uiux #webhorror #usabilityhorror #dynamicviews

dredmorbius@joindiaspora.com

The State of Search (or how Google is rapidly un-nailing its once stellar UI/UX)

As I noted on Hacker News regarding the statement "Google Search pretty much nailed UI,": It's rapidly in the process of un-nailing it.

Having used DDG as my primary search engine since June 2013, I now prefer its presentation to Google's. It also makes me feel better when people call me a quack. (Close: I'm a cat. More fur, fewer feathers, far superior house-training).

I find Google's dynamic "oh, we're going to clear the page while you're refining your search terms to focus on higher relevance based on the results you're looking at now while you're typing that up" particularly egregious....

Continued at the dreddit.

#uiux #google #archive.org #usability #interface #search #fail