I’ve been visiting ui.stackexchange.com recently as a resource for ui/ux information. It’s a network within Stackexchange, a community powered Q&A hub that allows members to ask, answer, and rate. Here’s what I grabbed from their wiki:
The websites feature the ability for users to ask and answer questions, and through membership and active participation, to vote questions and answers up or down and edit questions and answers in a wiki fashion. Users can earn reputation points and “badges” through site participation; for example, a user is awarded 10 reputation points for receiving an “up” vote on an answer given to a question, and can receive badges for their valued contributions. By collecting reputation points, users are given more and more permissions, ranging from the ability to vote and comment on questions and answers to the ability to moderate many aspects of the site.
There have been some pretty good topics posted (284 as of today), but as with any great site, content is king, so once the community grows, it’ll be a great spot to gain some community insight.
By now, you’ve probably heard, seen, or used Google’s new search interaction, Google Instant. Quick recap: Instant progressively shows results as the user types a query and refreshes results as the user adds each additional character, all the while, providing suggested searches. Here are the benefits Google says will be gained by using Instant:
Faster Searches: By predicting your search and showing results before you finish typing, Google Instant can save 2-5 seconds per search.
Smarter Predictions: Even when you don’t know exactly what you’re looking for, predictions help guide your search. The top prediction is shown in grey text directly in the search box, so you can stop typing as soon as you see what you need.
Instant Results: Start typing and results appear right before your eyes. Until now, you had to type a full search term, hit return, and hope for the right results. Now results appear instantly as you type, helping you see where you’re headed, every step of the way.
I’ve noticed that i’ll keep typing my search even though the correct suggestion is right underneath. The 1st suggestion would be shown in gray in the main search bar, and I would dictate to that like I’m playing a typing game.
I have a habit of pressing ‘Enter’ after a search even when the result is already shown. I feel that when Instant suggests what I might be looking for in the field but I haven’t finished typing the entire query, pressing ‘Enter’ should default to the suggested query.
Refreshing results with each additional character is extremely fast.
There should be some type of hotkey to activate the “I’m Feeling Lucky” feature during a search.
I can’t wait to see if Instant will roll out on Google’s other features, especially maps and images. Unfortunately, I’m always expecting this type of interaction on every single search field I use elsewhere on the Internet. But some clever devs have made their own home-brewed versions to work on other services like YouTube and iTunes.
The Social Network’s new Pop-Up Videoesque i-Trailer just premiered on MySpace and allows users to click on hotspots during the video to reveal additional information or video about what they’re seeing. For instance, I didn’t know that Steve Chen, Co-Founder and CTO of YouTube used to work at Facebook when it was still a startup before he left to create the most popular online video service in the world with Chad Hurley and Jawed Karim. The i-Trailer also includes deeper links within the info that pauses the video and shows additional content like images and video:
Check out some more facts from the trailer at Mashable
As gesture and multi-touch interfaces continue to grow and become more adoptable as commonplace features, there seems to be a need to include it in new products. The one concern I have with this type of interaction is using the technology blindly (i.e. changing songs on your iPod Touch in your pocket, typing without looking, etc…) and figuring out how to use the device without any haptic feedback. IDENT Technology’s Gesture Remote is an interesting idea that uses touch and gesture in controlling your television.
Based on the video, Gesture Remote seems like a good idea, but comes with a few usability concerns as well. As Core77 points out, using distance between surface and finger (thumb) as a control mechanism would be difficult to make perfect. Those (elderly, handicapped, etc…) who are starting to lose human mechanical control or me when I’ve had a few coffees or energy drinks too many and starting to get caffeine jitters, would have an extremely difficult time accomplishing a task because we would be incapable or accidentally activating these exploratory features. There are a good number of channels I switch through and would quickly access by typing in the channel numbers, but based on the video, it seems as though numerical input is absent in this device.
I could also see the benefits of the remote – quickly scrolling up and down a long list of lineups in the channel guide, being able to swipe to change volume or adjacent channels, and tap to play/pause. Turning this into a hybrid device with a numeric keypad, and removing the thumb gesture would really make this a pretty interesting product.
Great discovery today on Lifehacker and 9to5Mac! You can plug in any device running iOS and play music stored on the hardware in iTunes 10. In previous releases of iTunes, you would need to sync your device with that computer in order to play music, so if I were at the office and tried to play music on my iPhone that was synced at home, I would have to wipe my library. After connecting the device to the computer, cancel the sync, and expand the contents of your device in the left navigation panel. Press play and voila!
In iTunes 10, and perhaps some up-to-date iTunes 9 versions, you can now plug in an iOS device, tell iTunes to Cancel the sync request (and check off “Don’t ask again”), and from there on out simply play music or movies off whatever device you have plugged in through that iconic white cable.
I haven’t tried playing video content because I don’t have any stored on my iPhone, but I would assume it would work as well. This is definitely a feature that should have been available a long time ago, but nonetheless, glad it’s finally implemented!