Tweeted this pre-iPad, quietly hoping it would be realised when Stevie took to the stage. General disappointment followed however this prototype stayed with me. Firstly because it’s a fantastic example of prototyping an idea. Further to this and despite the interaction on display being nothing particularly new, it is an insightful glance into where publishing is headed. Look around you and you will see Kindles, iPhones, Androids and all manner of touch enabled devices stuck to people’s digits. Their presence becomes more ubiquitous each day.
Specifically to do with publishing the observation that wins for me in the below example is how a magazine is finishable. I like this, seems pretty obvious but the impact as a design idea is central to the UX and at odds with our daily experience of the web.
As a magazine atoms become bits the opportunity to provide exhaustive content is apparent however can be at odds with the audience need. As someone who subscribes to Wired’s printed publication I get that. I want the editors insight. In the brief time I have available to read through a magazine this skilled encapsulation of a theme and coverage of an interest area is essential. Not only does the editor as cultural explorer bring all this good stuff together they can give me the hooks to undertake future sorties myself and goes some way to damped the information overload endemic in daily net living.
^ Mag+ touch screen protoype
I’ve developed a technology induced tic and i don’t think I’m the only one. let me explain… Technically mediated spaces, real and virtual, provide wonderful ways to communicate, source information and so on. Anyone(thing ;]) reading this is no doubt sensitive to the fact that technology is changing the way we live, behave and interact.
I’m fond of such technology and seek out services that can help me stay in touch with friends, conduct business, learn new things. The common set-up of these ‘background services’ requires that I add a means to be reminded when the status of the service changes. This frees me up to continue with other activities and ideally makes for time spent more productively.
The question for interaction designers is how to alert the user when the status has changed. For background services that present no requirement for immediate action such as such as email, twitter, mobile messaging, RSS feeds and iChat the balance has to be struck between alerting the user and interfering with what they are doing. i.e Non-modal. Or in non-geek-speak, glanceable.
If you think about email, that is the little envelope icon that appears on the application icon in the dock ( or system tray ) and the transient new message preview.
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The Twitterific client uses a similar technique by changing the colour of the application icon when new tweets arrive. My landline answerphone turns on a red light, iChat blinks the active conversation in the browser title bar.
The company Ambient Devices trade solely in this space. The most ingenious of their products being the umbrella which automatically checks the weather forecast and glows a light in the handle to indicate inclement weather.
This form of feedback is filtering into diverse environments. A physician clinic for example is using it to improve the performance of their physicians by enabling patients to rate their appointment experience and visualising the results as colour fields in the waiting room.
“Only two sites have the glanceable dashboard. ‘Our assumption is physicians will change their behaviour to get more green lights’”
I wonder what this colour-and-shame/carrot-and-colour?! approach does for the physicians motivation. What would it be like in a different scenario? e.g. at the design studio where I work clients complete a project scorecard, which rates performance across a few metrics, after the project is complete. The success of the idea depends on the granularity of the implementation. A company-wide performance beacon would engender collective responsibility and involvement to make sure the light stays green. However broadcasting personal traffic light performance would most likely do the opposite and create cliques and resentment as people get branded. “I wouldn’t use her for that project she’s a red.”
So what about the tic. Well in effect I have become the regulator in the system and checking for updates to the twittering bird and mail icon has become second nature. Being the curious type, if the status has changed i’m more likely to check it, notwithstanding pressing issues which can be a real distraction. Less often but nonetheless apparent are phantom tingles, thinking my mobile is vibrating in my pocket to let me know I have a message. I don’t think it’s time to call the doctor yet but perhaps going off radar now and again will provide moments of solace and less eye darting. maybe. bark.
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