Designing for Experience

A Holistic Approach to Design for People, Interaction, & Business

 

Designing for Sociability

This is a repost from a course blog from Interaction Culture.

I was struck quite forcibly by G. Smith when she said that the fifth imperative was to design for sociability.  She follows this up by saying,

“When IT systems fail to support the social aspect of work and leisure, when they dehumanize, and de-civilize our relationship with each, they impoverish the rich social web in which we livea nd opperate, essential for both well-being and efficiency.”

When you think of the first few generations of “office” programs for PCs (this was not the case for mainframe/client structure though, but these didn’t have the much in the way of office software) they were designed for, almost without exception, just a single user.  After the advent of the BBS and later the accessibility of the internet and email these programs continued, and still continue to treat the user as if she were the practically the only person in the universe.   This is a great example of how this medium is still incredibly immature.  When we work we usually work in groups, teams, and often nested within a hierarchy.  Our applications are single user centric, and so we must email copies of things around, try to track changes, and control versions.  It’s maddening, and I’m sure we’ve all run into these kinds of issues.  Yes we have started to address this with some different add-ons, such as Sharepoint and other kinds of examples, but these are add-ons, and often expensive ones at that.

The problem is that we took another medium, the physical office with it’s typewriters, desktops (you know the horizontal surface, talk about a word that has been co-opted), and other 10-key calculators and directly translated it into the digital, completely forgetting that PEOPLE work in offices.  People who work together.  It is essentially a radio show being performed on TV, ridiculous, but a necessary first step.

Yes we must design with a connected, social world in mind.  This CANNOT be an add-on, an extra service, something that you try to include initially that is buggy that you work out in the first few patches (if the user is lucky).

If we talk about efficiency in the work place like Smith does at the end of that quote, then we can think about how much time we waste on these kinds of issues because M$ Office, and not even Apples new iWork has really addressed these issues well.  Google Docs is a small baby step in the right direction, but not exactly revolutionary.

Yes we are social animals, and we’ve ignored that for way too long.

A few caveats on this issue.  I don’t blame the initial designers for the way this is too much.  I mean most PCs were stand alone machines with cool tape drives, 5.25 inch disks and later if you were lucky you had a 2 MB hard drive.  (I laughed so hard the day I threw out our old IBM clone with dual 5.25 drives and that 2MB hard drive that cost us something like $750 back in the day).  The problem is we’re stuck in this kind of thinking 25 years later.

Filed under : HCI
By aaronh
On September 2, 2007
At 10:17 pm
Comments : 0
 
 

The first week is over

Amazingly I’m still alive.   Really it hasn’t been that bad.  I’ve been agonizing about course selection for months, but more intensely the last few weeks.  It turns out I made some good choices (I may change my views on this as the semester progresses obviously).

What’s happening:

The Graduate Informatics Student Association is starting up, and I can’t wait to get it going.

I’m taking “Interaction Culture” with Jeff Bardzell, it’s exciting stuff, and Jeff knows how to handle a class.  Fun thing is, we have a course blog.  It looks very promising indeed.

I’m taking “HCI Design Theory” with Erik Stolterman, Erik rules, and is very quotable.  I’m sure you’ll see some tweets about a few of these.  All I can say is that the second day he mentioned the word’s “Utlimate Particular” and “Aristotle.”  I’m feeling pretty comfortable at this stage, but I’m sure I’ll be out of my depth really quick.

I presented to stakeholders the current status on the Games Analysis Database (what’s with the capitals, yet I am compelled to use them).  I think it went reasonably well, I honestly just want to see the project move forward.

I tried to go visit President McRobbie, but had to leave for my aforementioned  presentation before it was my turn.  Hopefully I’ll be able to meet with him in the next month.

I will hopefully have something a little more enlightening to say, but in the meantime here is a link to some of the places where I have some shared items:

Google Reader 

Google Notebook 

Filed under : Grad School
By aaronh
On September 1, 2007
At 12:10 pm
Comments : 0