Newsletters
News & Information for Technology Purchasers NewsFactor Sites:       NewsFactor.com     Enterprise Security Today     CRM Daily     Business Report     Sci-Tech Today  
   
Home Enterprise I.T. Cloud & Virtualization Applications Unified Communications More Topics...
Brocade delivers
cloud-optimized networking solutions
to deploy, manage, and scale networks.

www.brocade.com
Enterprise Software
Unlock The Potential In Your People
Average Rating:
Rate this article:  
Usability Guru Rips Windows 8 Design
Usability Guru Rips Windows 8 Design

By Jennifer LeClaire
November 20, 2012 7:04AM

    Bookmark and Share
More blows for Windows 8. And this time, they're heavy. Jakob Nielsen says Windows 8's user interface sacrifices usability on the altar of looking different. Nielsen calls the icons in Windows 8 flat, monochromatic, and coarsely simplified. He says the overly live tiles backfire and that the Windows 8 designers went overboard, while key functions are hidden.
 



Usability guru Jakob Nielsen had to end his review of Windows 8 with an assurance that he doesn't hate Microsoft Relevant Products/Services. That's because he tore it to shreds.

Apparently, Nielsen didn't like what he deemed a reversal of Microsoft's user interface strategy, one that differs from the traditional Bill Gates-driven style that emphasizes powerful commands. He said Microsoft has "gone soft" and "smothers" users with big colorful tiles while hiding needed features.

"One of the worst aspects of Windows 8 for power users is that the product's very name has become a misnomer. Windows no longer supports multiple windows on the screen," Nielsen wrote in a blog post. "Win8 does have an option to temporarily show a second area in a small part of the screen, but none of our test users were able to make this work. Also, the main UI [user interface] restricts users to a single window, so the product ought to be renamed 'Microsoft Window.' "

Sacrificing Usability for Looks?

As Nielsen sees it, the single-window strategy works well on tablets and is a must on a small phone screen. But with a big monitor and dozens of applications and Web sites running simultaneously, he said, a high-end PC Relevant Products/Services user definitely benefits from the ability to see multiple windows at the same time.

"When users can't view several windows simultaneously, they must keep information from one window in short-term memory Relevant Products/Services while they activate another window. This is problematic for two reasons," Nielsen said. "First, human short-term memory is notoriously weak, and second, the very task of having to manipulate a window -- instead of simply glancing at one that's already open -- further taxes the user's cognitive resources."

Nielsen said the new user interface sacrifices usability on the altar of looking different. He called the icons flat, monochromatic, and coarsely simplified. He said the overly live tiles backfire and that the application designers went overboard. He also complained that the charms are hidden in generic commands. Charms are a panel of icons that slide in from the screen's right side after a flicking gesture from the right edge on a tablet Relevant Products/Services or after pointing the mouse to the screen's upper right corner on a computer.

"In practice, the charms work poorly -- at least for new users. The old saying, out of sight, out of mind, turned out to be accurate," Nielsen said. "Because the charms are hidden, our users often forgot to summon them, even when they needed them. In applications such as Epicurious, which included a visible reminder of the search feature, users turned to search much more frequently." (continued...)

1  |  2  |  Next Page >

 

Tell Us What You Think
Comment:

Name:

Eric J. Green:

Posted: 2012-11-21 @ 9:49am PT
Am I mistaken or does the full Windows 8 version not have a desktop where you can run multiple applications side by side?

I know with Windows 8 RT, you can only have one application run at a time and it is horrendous to rotate between applications. This is the same for iPAD 1 (not sure about 2+, since I've never used them.) But if I were a power user, why would I purchase the Windows 8 RT version? Go with the full blown Windows 8 version and boom: I'm a multitasking champ again.



Brocade delivers a comprehensive cloud-optimized networking portfolio of products and open-architecture solutions to simplify and accelerate the deployment of cloud computing and provide maximum deployment flexibility with plug-in scalability. Click here to learn more.


 Enterprise Software
1.   HP's SMB IT in a Box Uses Google Apps
2.   VMware Brings Analytics to Logs
3.   SAP Targets Oracle with Hybris Buy
4.   Cloud Rains Billion-Dollar Deals
5.   Salesforce Buys ExactTarget for $2.5B


advertisement
Product Information and Resources for Technology You Can Use To Boost Your Business

Enterprise Hardware Spotlight
Samsung Offers Tiny, Superfast PCIe SSDs for Ultrabooks
Solid-state drives are continuing their march forward. On Monday, Samsung Electronics announced it has started to mass produce the first PCI-Express 3.0 SSDs for the new wave of Ultrabooks.
 
Amazon.com Joins 3D Printer Craze, Enabling Wide Availability
Commercially available 3D printers have recently moved from being expensive hobbyist devices to being pricey but accessible consumer and manufacturing machines. And now, Amazon.com will sell 3D printers & supplies online.
 
New Facebook Data Center Uses All Home-Grown Servers
Facebook has opened its new data center in Lulea, Sweden. The data center is a first in two ways: the first in Europe and the first to be equipped with all Facebook-designed, Open Compute servers.
 

Enterprise Technology Spotlight
Texting Spammers Correlate Phone Users to Local Banks
If you use an Internet-connected smartphone, touch tablet, e-reader, notebook, laptop or desktop computer you care about cybersecurity and online privacy. One topic: SMS text-messaging spam.
 
New Facebook Data Center Uses All Home-Grown Servers
Facebook has opened its new data center in Lulea, Sweden. The data center is a first in two ways: the first in Europe and the first to be equipped with all Facebook-designed, Open Compute servers.
 
Cisco Telecom Router Ready for Internet Traffic Flood
The Carrier Routing System-X unveiled by Cisco for the telecommunications industry is a 400 Gbps per slot system that can be expanded to nearly 1 petabit per second, enough to deal with the coming flood in demand.
 

Navigation
NewsFactor Network
Home/Top News | Enterprise I.T. | Cloud & Virtualization | Applications | Unified Communications | Mobile Tech | Hardware | Business Intelligence
World Wide Web | Network Security | Data Storage | Small Business | Microsoft/Windows | Apple/Mac | Linux/Open Source | Personal Tech
Press Releases
NewsFactor Network Enterprise I.T. Sites
NewsFactor Technology News | Enterprise Security Today | CRM Daily

NewsFactor Business and Innovation Sites
Sci-Tech Today | NewsFactor Business Report

NewsFactor Services
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | XML/RSS Feed

About NewsFactor Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Careers @ NewsFactor | Services for PR Pros | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2013 NewsFactor Network. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo. Member of Accuserve Ad Network.