Good UI Design: Make It Easy, Show Me You Care - ReadWriteWeb
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Saved by 20 people (4 private), first by anonymouse user on 2008-03-27
- Hkeziah on 2008-07-26 - Tags ui , design , psychology , simplicity
- Msolle on 2008-07-16 - Tags design , usability , ui , webdesign , simplicity , psychology , website , ux , Forms , HTML , interface , Layout
- Matthewsolle on 2008-07-16 - Tags design , usability , ui , webdesign , simplicity , psychology , website , ux , Forms , HTML , interface , Layout
- Cvelis on 2008-06-02 - Tags usability , ui , webdesign , psychology , simplicity , design , toread
- Kratingdaeng on 2008-05-16 - Tags design , ui , readwriteweb , gui , web
Public Sticky notes
Highlighted by cbajgier
Highlighted by hkeziah
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Highlighted by cbajgier
After finding herself in need of tech support, she noticed an odd form field on the Support Request page: "Emotional State."
The drop-down included choices like excited, confused, worried, upset, panicked, and angry. Samantha chose the feeling that best described her mood ("worried", by the way), and then made a startling discovery:
Highlighted by cbajgier
Highlighted by cbajgier
Highlighted by takuya514
Highlighted by cbajgier
Instead of a popup, we add a little box on the bottom of the sidebar every couple of weeks and ask: "Are you happy?" There are two buttons, Yes and No, and an optional comment field. This is the most lightweight method of collecting user feedback. Note that:
- We're not popping up an annoying window.
- We ask a simple question.
- There are only two options – "yes" and "no" - and no Send button.
Highlighted by cbajgier
Highlighted by cbajgier
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