iOS 5 camera fail

In case you didn't hear, Apple has unveiled its new version of iOS - iOS5.  Apple boast that the new operating system for its iDevices has over 200 new features, one of which is allowing quick access to the camera from the lock screen.

Now this is a great idea, as it allows for faster capturing of that all important Kodak moment, however, I think there is a bit if a flaw in the UI execution.

According to feature overview, and as demonsrated in the overview video (3:10), one simple tap from the lock screen, then happy snap away.  Here's the catch in my opinion.  If I accidently tap that button in my pocket, then my camera is going to be on, and before I know it, I will be out of battery.  Anyone that owns an iPhone will know how power hungry these devices are.

Instead, why not simply slide to unlock (right to left) to get into the camera?  It's a convention that users are used to from the lock screen, plus also removes the chance of accidental activation, leading to poor battery performance.

Just a thought.

Squint and click

Spotify is awesome.  Music on demand with a few adverts here and there - radio for the web in some ways.  

While it is nice to have a legal way to listen to music, tips hat to Napster, some of the aforementioned adverts might needs a little more thought.  Like this one.

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A white background with white link text kinda undermines the purpose of contrast.  At least the album covers are nice and big and clickable.  Time for some Ella...

 

Messaging that makes you go, wha..?!

A wee while ago I banged on about my British Gas online experience.  Well, here are a few more bits of goodness that have made me stop and think while on my journey through the interwebs. Home Office This is a nice little gem.  Not often you get asked to enter a date in DD-MMM-YYYY format - in a text field even.
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MM would have surely sufficed, and been one less character to enter.   Bureaucracy in all its glory. National Express This is up there as  one of the most useless error message ever.
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Trying to book a bus to Glastonbury.  I got this message a few times as I was selecting the times I wanted.  Would have been nice to indicate whether it was the outbound bus, returning bus, or both that was full at the times I requested.  Ended up calling as it was quicker than working out all the possible outbound / return combinations. Fogbugz Quite like how Fogbugz displays the set-up process as 'your end' and 'our end'.

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Only minor beef is that 'email address confirmed' is red, to me, indicative of an error, even though the messaging and big tick say that all is good.

The real Minority Report

When I first saw Minority Report, I was wowed by the space-aged interface that a certain glove wearing Tom Cruise was interacting with. Yesterday, TED published a talk by John Underkoffler which was filmed earlier this year.  John was a consultant on the film, and has now actually built the interface.

The colour of money

On a recent trip to Helsinki I needed to stop at the cash machine to aquire the local currency. I wandered about the terminal and found the ATM.  Now to me, ATMs are one of those universal devices which follow a standard operating process.  Insert card into card slot, mash your PIN into the keypad, and bank gods permitting, cash will magically appear from cash slot.  Simple. Well, they do it a little different way up north. [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="480" caption="eeny meeny miny mo"]
[/caption] As you can see from the above, I was offered two choices.  Straight away I went for the yellow, familiar looking card slot - the one with the arrows showing you the way.  Seconds later, my card was returned to me with an error message advising cards with a chip should be inserted into the blue slot.  WTF?!  Don't make me think.  OK, forgetting the technical reasons, why doesn't this machine (and the others scattered throughout Helsinki) simply have the one slot, and let the machine determine the type of card, and respond accordingly? Donald Norman coined the term affordance in his book The Design of Everyday Things, where he states:
... the term affordance refers to the perceived and actual properties of the thing, primarily those fundamental properties that determine just how the thing could possibly be used. [...] Affordances provide strong clues to the operations of things. Plates are for pushing. Knobs are for turning. Slots are for inserting things into. Balls are for throwing or bouncing. When affordances are taken advantage of, the user knows what to do just by looking: no picture, label, or instruction needed." (Norman 1988, p.9)
I like the last sentence.

Bills, bills, bills

Gotta pay those bills. No one likes paying them, some try to avoid them, but at the end of the day paying your bills is one of those 'responsible grown-up things' that your mum always talked about. Fine. The electric bill arrived. At least it's an online statement - a tree was saved. While environmentalists celebrated, I quietly wept at what was owed. Damn you cold winters! At least British Gas provide an online payment service, so I have been speared the pain, and more tears, of calling them. Now, I'm a big believer of business that have embraced the web, especially those that at the end of the day make it easier for me to fulfil my obligations. So I rocked along to the British Gas site, logged on in, selected 'make a payment'. All was going well. I'll be in and out in no time, safe in the knowledge the PS3 will be powered for another month. However, this is where I started to notice a few scratch marks, on an otherwise polished payment service. Firstly, I could only pay one account at a time. WTF? I owed both gas and electricity. I received the bill for both at the same time. Why can I pay for both at the same time? Sure I think that the fact you can pay online is great, but not to the point where I want to have to go through the process twice. What about time saving? [caption id="attachment_222" align="aligncenter" width="400" caption="Radio select - but I wanted to pay for both in one transaction"]
[/caption] Perhaps the help question, aptly entitled 'Can I make more than one payment?' will be of assistance. Nope. [caption id="attachment_213" align="aligncenter" width="400" caption="Let's check out the help"]
[/caption] [caption id="attachment_214" align="aligncenter" width="400" caption="Help says no"]
[/caption] Fine, so I selected the account to pay. Roll on step two. What's this? [caption id="attachment_215" align="aligncenter" width="400" caption="Don't make me think please"]
[/caption] It may seem like a small thing, but the fact I needed to stop and think about matching the numeric date on my card to the corresponding month in the drop down, is a rookie mistake. Matching systems with the real world is super important, especially when people are entering personal information. This issue could be simply resolved by adding (XX) in front of the month, where XX is the month number, so January would be displayed (01) January in the list. Right, step two rant over. Time to review my details then pay the man. But wait a minute. What's this? [caption id="attachment_217" align="aligncenter" width="400" caption="Come on. At least be consistent"]
[/caption] The date is now numeric! Consistency please BG. Gripes aside, there are some good things about this process. For a start, the process is short. You also know where you are at each step, and help is provided along with the option to go back and correct any information. Finally, and most importantly, it works. Now where did I put that controller?

User centred what?

"Informed design is essential", according to Bill Buxton, and the man does know a thing or two about designing user experiences.  One way to make sure your design is informed is to adopt and integrate a user centred design (UCD) process. Will Sansbury has pulled together a good little presentation explaining the steps involved in UCD.  The goal of UCD - ensure that what you produce will meet the needs of the intended audience.

"Cover Flow Multitasking" for iPhone.

As good as the iPhone is, there are still a few features missing.  One being the ability to multi-task between the plethora of apps you have installed. This video by Ocean Observation shows how they would tackle the multitasking problem, and while their solution occupies too much home screen real estate for my liking (it could hide away and only appear when user taps the home key twice),  it is definitely a feature I would use. Wonder if the folk at Apple are pondering such things?

Travel mash-up for MS Surface

Brand Republic today reported that TravelTainment have created a travel mash-up for MS Surface. The application plots photos of resorts on a Google map, and TravelTainment are hoping that the this interactive brochure will help transform the way holiday makers approach booking holidays. Although it's not clear from the video, it would be good if features such as retrieving user reviews from sites like tripadvisor, or location specifc information from wikitravel were also included. Interesting that the mapping technology of choice is Google maps, and not Microsoft's Bing Maps.