Mobile Site vs. Full Site (Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox)
►http://www.useit.com/alertbox/mobile-vs-full-sites.html
#guru #lebienlemal #design #ergonomie
Mobile Site vs. Full Site (Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox)
►http://www.useit.com/alertbox/mobile-vs-full-sites.html
#guru #lebienlemal #design #ergonomie
Transmedia Design for 3 Screens - Make That 5 (Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox)
►http://www.useit.com/alertbox/3-screens-transmedia.html
Many people predict that mobile devices will be the only important user #interface #platform in the so-called “post-PC” future. Some even recommend designing websites for mobile first, and then modifying the design for the desktop PC as an afterthought.
I disagree.
Although it makes for a good story to claim that something new will kill the old, things rarely work out that way. As Peter Zollman once said, “with the possible exception of the town crier, a new medium has never put an old medium out of business.” Despite TV, we still have radio — and, for that matter, live theater. In the computer industry, we still have mainframes, and IBM harvests billions each year accordingly.
Si l’on passe outre la « prédictivite », il y a quand même deux grandes tendances qui se dessinent : 1. le web « #desktop » avec des bouts de #mediaqueries dedans, et 2. le web « #mobile » sur des petites interfaces.
On en est encore aux tâtonnements. La preuve avec les sites de journalisme qui pourraient la plupart du temps fort bien s’accommoder d’un zoom sur les contenus ; ça tombe bien, c’est natif à la plupart des navigateurs de #smartphones, le zoom.
Les deux grandes tendances dont je parlais vont avoir du sens avec les services applicatifs en ligne, qui demandent de l’efficacité, là où le surf tel qu’on le pratique sur un ordinateur ne demande pas le même attachement à l’efficacité. Voir à #sérendipité
Scrolling and Attention (Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox)
►http://www.useit.com/alertbox/scrolling-attention.html
#Scrolling and Attention (Jakob #Nielsen's Alertbox)
►http://www.useit.com/alertbox/scrolling-attention.html
“The following chart shows the distribution of user fixations along stripes that were 100 pixels tall. The bars represent total gaze time, as opposed to the number of fixations. (In other words, two fixations of 200 ms count the same as one fixation of 400 ms.)”
►http://www.useit.com/alertbox/eyetracking-fixations-above-fold-vs-below.png
Top-10 New Mistakes of Web Design (Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox)
►http://www.useit.com/alertbox/990530.html
Top-10 New Mistakes of Web Design (Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox)
►http://www.useit.com/alertbox/990530.html
Write Articles, Not Blog Postings (Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox)
►http://www.useit.com/alertbox/articles-not-blogs.html
To demonstrate world-class expertise, avoid quickly written, shallow postings. Instead, invest your time in thorough, value-added content that attracts paying customers.
Blog Usability: Top 10 Weblog Design Mistakes (Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox)
►http://www.useit.com/alertbox/weblogs.html
Weblogs are a form of website. Normal website usability guidelines therefore apply to them, as do this year’s top ten design mistakes. But weblogs are also a special genre of website; they have unique characteristics and thus distinct usability problems.
#ergonomie #dev #blog #business #communication #design #web #webdesign