| Question and answer: design means remembering to ask the question |
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Volume 9 , Issue 1 (January 2002)
table of contents
COLUMN: Whiteboard
table of contents
Pages: 11 - 15
Year of Publication: 2002
ISSN:1072-5520
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 0, Downloads (12 Months): 14, Citation Count: 1
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ABSTRACT
Have you found yourself using standard design features simply because they are standards? I know I have. We assume that a feature has become standard for a good reason, and we may follow it without much consideration. Josh Seiden urges us to change our approach, restrain our impulse to use the standard answer to a design problem, and look deeper to see if it really does meet our users' needs.---Elizabeth Buie P.S. When I conceived "Whiteboard," I envisioned a provocative, opinionated, informal, and humorous column. What I did not insist on was that I agree with its contributors' views. This installment was difficult for me to edit---not for its main point (challenging assumptions can be a very good thing) but because I question some of its specific recommendations (I certainly want to know in which folder my file is being stored!) and also because I am involved in standards development. It was an interesting exercise in maintaining my detachment, and I have Josh to thank for the opportunity.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
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Cooper, Alan. 1995. About Face. Foster City, California: IDG Books.
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Nielsen, Jakob. 1999. When Bad Design Elements Become the Standard. Alertbox, November 14, 1999. (http://www.useit.com/alertbox/991114.html).
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Norman, Donald. 1988. The Design of Everyday Things. New York: Doubleday
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