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User
Friendliness: Do Computers Have to be
Clinical and Boring? |
by:
Daniel
Punch |
While
sleeping through a lecture recently I roused
for just long enough to catch the lecturer
saying that "Error messages should not try
to be funny or amusing, they should be clear
and concise". This got me thinking about
the ever-elusive goal of user friendliness.
The concept has changed much over the years
with packages such as DOS going from being
one of the easiest packages on the market,
to now being complicated, convoluted, and
ignored. I have begun to wonder why I am
being taught that computers have to be boring
to be user friendly.
The predictable nature of computers is quite
dull. I study computers and work with them,
so I'm used to experiencing a certain number
of faults every now and then. I find these
dull and depending on how close my current
deadline is, downright infuriating. On the
Internet side of things there is little
quite as irritating as running into a 404
page when you're trying to find something.
However, the other day I ran into a site
that displayed random 404 Haikus and instead
of being upset at the fact that my time
was being wasted, I ended up typing in bizarre
addresses just so that I could read all
of the little poems. You can find a few
lists of 404 Haikus from a simple search
in Google. Humorous website Homestarrunner.com
has an entertaining page when you get the
address wrong that screams "Four-oh-foured!"
and displays a very entertaining message.
They have another 404 page on their site
that is a hilarious cartoon you can watch.
In terms of applications, games occasionally
have amusing error messages such as the
one in 'Escape From Monkey Island' with
the title "Congratulations, you have found
a bug!" and concludes with "...get back
to work". There's naturally a bit more leniency
and tendency towards entertaining secrets
in games. Easter Eggs used to be a lot more
common in software applications. These are
hidden sections of code that the average
user will never activate but which provide
an amusing result when they do. For a large
list go to http://www.eeggs.com and search
for a specific type of software program
that you use. There may be a few minutes
of hidden entertainment to be found.
Some of the greatest Easter Eggs came from
Microsoft's software stable. Word 97 used
to have a great little pinball game built
in if you followed the correct steps, while
Excel 97 had a fun little 'flight simulator'
built in. Unfortunately employees are apparently
no longer allowed to include these after
some offensive messages were once included
in a program.
Companies now require a very professional
image and software costs quite a lot to
develop, so we're likely to see all the
amusing quirks removed from software that's
released making it nothing but functional.
I think that this is unfortunate. I agree
that error messages need to be functional
and let the user know what's gone wrong
but there's no harm in taking the edge off
the fact that they've possibly just lost
a few hour's work by adding a little humor
into the picture. As long as common sense
is adhered to I don't really see why my
grey pop up boxes all need to say exactly
the same thing and be filled with data that's
largely useless to me. Thank you, I realize
that the program has encountered an error.
I assumed this when it stopped working.
Why not give me a reason to actually read
error messages instead of having to dismiss
them as soon as they appear?
I think the idea of user friendliness has
become too clinical and precise. We have
rules and structures defining what is or
isn't helpful. We put fancy, bubbly skins
on the dull and mundane and think that we're
making it all more interesting. Just occasionally
I'd like my computer to pop up and say "Human
Error. Please replace user and try again."
About the author:
Daniel Punch
M6.Net Web Helpers
http://www.m6.net
Daniel Punch is a writer working at M6.Net:
'The web-hosting company for humans.' M6.Net
is working hard to help humanity experience
the power and freedom to develop their own
part of the Internet, to share their information
and connect with anyone, anywhere, anytime.
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