The perfect weapon to webapp coder block! | Designing the Moment: Web Interface Design Concepts in Action (Voices That Matter) | Robert Hoekman Jr.
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Designing the Moment: Web Interface Design Concepts in Action (Voices That Matter)
Robert Hoekman Jr.
New Riders Press
, 2008 - 256 pages
average customer review:
based on 12 reviews
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highly recommended
Good insight, doesn't go far enough
There are many useful
concepts
illustrated in this book, including:
* Gutenberg diagram-Primary optical area and terminal anchor
* Ambient signifiers by Ross Howard - color, size, transparency level
* The goal to create positive
moment
s, with a great example of the use of autocomplete
* Video!
* Display validation pre-submit, aka check boxes which activate next to a validated form as the user tabs through the
interface
* Many other nuanced goodies
One of the greatest compliments is
that
this book doesn't go far enough, yet its core message is to go further than we have gone, hence it is a book on the path...
Some criticisms
* Talks smack about former client
* Doesn't go far enough in reducing instruction text
* In showing character count in Twitter, does not indicate a "going over limit" could be handled
* Use of the phrase (e.g., me@mydomain.com) after an attendee email form field label-do we really have people who don't know what an email address looks like? And if so, are they really going to learn it on this
web
site?
* Repetitive use of text, e.g., attendee first name, attendee last name, attendee email
* Heavy use of drop-downs
* Wants to (needlessly) coin the term protocast, for a screencast used for a demo/walkthrough
* Inconsistency in handling question marks as helper links in an interface (uses both ? and what's this? instead of simply ?
But these complaints are largely trying to hold the book to the standard it is trying to create for the interface
design
er. In other words, any of its detr
action
s and failures are largely seen as indicators of its success in making us think more deeply about what it means to design for the moment.
Thank you sir.
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Few good ideas for a few specific web design topics
I was really expecting something out of this title after reading the previous
Design
ing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to
Web
Application Design but the book turned out to be a little disappointment. It contains 31 short chapters
that
put the principles of the previous book in to use. Some of the topics discussed like signing in, forms and so on can give you a few really nice ideas to be used in a project.
The point is that these few topics could have been published as online articles as they hardly have enough to say to put together a whole book. If the book would've been published a couple of years ago the "not so interesting" topics could have also been worth printing. The language is easy and really fast to read so you can quickly skim the book through and then concentrate on the interesting topics with more thought.
This title clearly falls in to the box of average things...
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The perfect weapon to webapp coder block!
Like many of you here, I write
web
apps. Some are written in the context (and confines) as hobbyist, others are for the job. I'm fortunate enough to have my passion and my career follow parallel disciplines. Unfortunately, it means when I'm stuck on something, its effecting me TWICE as bad as I can neither work nor play! I found this book quite by accident, digging through the digital stacks on web applications, and rocketed through it within a weekend - seriously, I winced every time I closed it, and could only think about when I could squeeze in some more time with it.
First and foremost: this book is not a "How To" in the strict sense of the phrase - it will not give you a primer on web application
design
from end-to-end. Which was great, I wasn't looking for someone to come around and up-end my own methodologies, my own principles, etc and tell me "this is how you do it." Instead, this book is a "this is how I do it" book: Mr. Hoekman will walk you through efforts he himself has made on behalf of his clients to better their web application experience. He describes and defines these zen-like '
moment
s' when the
interface
just 'works', and how he looks to create them whenever possible. The book is beautifully illustrated as these ideas take shape so you can see the progression. He really broadened my understanding of some core
concepts
on interface and how they are perceived by users
that
I have been overlooking, or simply ignoring as being irrelevant.
To re-state: you won't see a single line of HTML/Javascript/Perl/PHP/Ruby here! It's a wonderful departure from the tick-and-tack of the technical and I plan to keep it within arm's reach for those times when I need a mental 'reboot'.
I ordered his earlier book,
Designing
the Obvious, recently as well and can't wait. Robert: If I ever run into you in a Phoenix-area Starbucks I'll have to shake your hand ;)
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Needs some weight
Hoekmann's last book
Design
ing the Obvious was pretty good: a short, readable survey of some user experience tactics and tips. Nearly all of it was applicable and relevant.
This book (published, what, a year later?) seems hurried and much more superficial. It's really just a collection of short essays
that
run the gamut from mildly useful to simply wrong. Unfortunately, Hoekman's decided that *none* of his user
interface
design advice needs support from research, usability, or even real-world implementations. It's the level of opinionated but poorly-backed up writing you'd expect from a
web
log. What products or sites are these techniques used on, and how have they affected user behavior? Hoekman's central argument is that "the details
matter
", that the smallest aspect of a user experience is worth agonizing over. Is that true? It seems like it ought to be, but tinkering with the nuances of inter
action
s seems like the *most* critical time to be able to measure improvements. Unfortunately, there's nothing here that really convinces me that a given idea is good, only short exercises often without any context.
Finally, Hoekman's writing style is exactly what you'd get on a weblog: overly informal, full of sentence fragments and inelegant constructions. NewRiders has shown a worsening trend to publish books that seem awfully lightly edited, to put it kindly.
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Great stories on how to improve the user experience
Robert Hoekman Jr. second book,
Design
ing the
Moment
, focuses on improving the online user experience. His approach is a practical one: design
interface
s
that
respect users and allow them to feel in control.
Robert's goal is to inspire the
web
professional to "improve the moment" for users. His storytelling method of explaining strategies makes the 220 page book a quick and fun read. The book contains 30 stories, based on his own experiences of real-world applications and the step-by-step approach taken toward resolving design inter
action
issues.
The stories are concise, and offer a critique of each phase as changes are made to interfaces. Robert has a "think out loud" method which allows the reader to better understand the decision making process. Question steps along the way and don't hesitate to make decisions you might change in the future.
Designing
interfaces is an iterative process.
Designing the Moment assumes the reader has knowledge of web design and development; it does not provide the specific code to implement the recommendations. As Robert mentions in the book, "This book is meant as a conversation starter. It's meant to get you thinking".
The book is divided into seven parts:
Part 1: Getting Oriented - give a good first impression to the user
Part 2: Learning - make it easier for users to find their way around
Part 3: Searching - improve the search interface
Part 4: Diving In - great tips on improving forms and video controls
Part 5: Participating - focus on social media
Part 6: Managing Information - how to manage lots of information
Part 7: Moving On - the sign out process
My favorite story in the book is in Chapter 7, where Robert discusses the simplicity of clear labels. Make it easy for users to to use applications. Provide users with simple, easy to understand labels and instructions. On forms or applications, rather than displaying an error message that the user didn't enter information in a valid format, add informative text on the form or application form field that describes what is acceptable.
Designing the Moment is a wonderful resource for information architects, usability experts, interaction designers and developers. I highly recommend it!
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The trick to great
design
is knowing how to think through each decision so
that
users don't have to. In
Designing
the
Moment
:
Web
Interface
Design
Concepts
in
Action
, Robert Hoekman, Jr., author of Designing the Obvious, presents over 30 stories that illustrate how to put good design principles to work on real-world web application interfaces to make them obvious and compelling. From the first impression to the last, Hoekman takes a think out loud approach to interface design to show us how to look critically at design decisions to ensure that human beings, the kind that make mistakes and do things we don't expect, can walk away from our software feeling productive, respected, and smart.
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