Archive for the ‘usability’ Category


APML

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

On Monday, as I may have mentioned, I attended MinneWebCon 2008. Looking back, I think Laurie McGinley’s presentation on microformats was my favorite session of the day. I had no idea I would find it as interesting as I did.

I think the concept that intrigues me the most is APML, or Attention Profile Markup Language.

How many of you use an RSS reader? Raise your hands. How many times a week to you go and “Mark All As Read”? RSS was a godsend for those of us who are interested in finding information on the web. The ability to scan hundreds, or even thousands of titles of my favorite websites to decide to read was exciting, for a while. Soon people like me built up so many feeds that the practice of scanning became overwhelming. After your feed posts get a few days old, there are just way too many even to scan through. So almost daily we all go through and mark them all as read. Really we’re just getting them out of the way because we want to scan the 200-300 newest headlines. You know what I’m talking about. Enter APML.

In an APML-enabled world, I can decide what topics I’m most interested in and the blog posts that most closely match my predefined interests will rise to the top. I can focus my attention on the posts that are most interesting to me. Sound great? We’re not quite there yet. There are a few websites out there trying to utilize the concept, but as far as usability goes, they’ve got a long way to go. I want to use APML because I have limited time. If I have to work very hard to use the service, I quickly move on. That sounds petty, but my lack of time/attention is what got me to APML in the first place.

But the technology is not far from being implemented. It serves as a reminder that relatively low-tech solutions can still emerge as important tools on the web.

Transparency

Friday, April 11th, 2008

A thought struck me yesterday as I was toying with drop.io. Terms like cellular, mobile, and web 2.0 are slowly going to fade. The key to new social media is transparency. Usability is going to be a barrier to overcome so that the user doesn’t feel like they are taking a series of steps on a phone, but instead feel like they’re making instantaneous connections without thinking about it at all.

Twitter is cool, but some of the more advanced mobile features are like little command line commands. Technology people are cool with that and early adopters are willing to learn it, but what about a 14-yr old? Bringing those services to those consumers is going to require a big improvement in the UI and probably take a lot more bandwidth.

A phone or computer is still a relatively crude device when you consider the number of steps it takes to accomplish a task. After a while it feels natural, but for a lot of day-to-day things, it could be a lot simpler. We’re just not there yet. We’ll get there. Apple took a step in the right direction with the iPhone when they totally disregarded all current phone interfaces. Even that is only the beginning.