Tuesday, August 31, 2004
Large objects
The Science Museum has an outpost in Wroughton, near Swindon, which houses its collection of large objects:
The whole spectrum of collections of scientific and technological interest are stored and conserved here ranging from the Lockheed Constellation airliner to early computers, from bicycles to the Woods Press and MRI scanners to hovercrafts. The Oxford branch of the British Computer Society has organised a group trip to Wroughton, to take place on the afternoon of 10 March, following a local pub lunch.
The entire Wroughton site will also be open all day from Friday 10 September to Monday 13 September, as part of Heritage Open Days.
You probably won't get to see all the 20,000 large objects housed in six aircraft hangers, but the edited highlights are sure to be worthwhile and fun.
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Monday, August 30, 2004
The 2004 Polls Apart report from SCOPE
As in previous years, the disability charity SCOPE has produced a report focusing on the accessibility of voting in the electoral pilots, which this year were all-postal.
These were some of the main points made by SCOPE:
The Parliamentary Rules prescribing wording and layout of key documents impact negatively on the accessibility of the election. The Rules give instructions on how some - but not all - printed material, such as ballot papers, should be designed, but the use of words such as 'large type' or 'conspicuous' does not provide sufficient guidance on producing accessible documents.
Wording of some printed material is also prescribed in the Rules, but the text given is unnecessarily complex, and information is not presented logically or broken down into appropriate sections. Returing Officers cannot alter this wording. "Many voters called the telephone helpline to find basic information which should have been obvious if the forms had been drafted correctly."
Information Cards, provided to all electors, crammed a large amount of information into a small area. "As the government would not pay for the cost of increasing the size of the card many local authorities did not produce the Information Card in a format that is accessible to a large number of people with visual impairments."
Rules required "large type" for words on the ballot paper, but some ballot papers used only 10 point size for candidate names.
Colour-coded ballot papers "were too close in contrast to help differentiate". There was no txtual information about ballot paper colour (helpful to peeople who cannot differentiate).
It was difficult to rip along perforated edges to separate a Declaration of Identity from a ballot paper without ripping the ballot paper, especially for older people.
The Declaration of Identity was "complex and overly legalistic". Some examples were printed using 8 point text.
Instructions to voters were often in fairly small type (e.g. 11 point). Use of pictograms led to text size being reduced.
Considerable dexterity was required to place the documents in envelopes such that the barcode appeared through the window of the envelope.
Election websites published by local authorities did not have any "design-led information to improve the understanding of the all-postal ballots".
Information on website pages was not regularly updated, and the election websites "were not promoted in many ballot packs". "Few local authorites had used a website address as a point of contact for voters in the Instructions to Voter".
While all local authorities responded to email enquiries for assistance to a visualy disabled person, within 24 hours, there was no uniform or standard way of dealing with the enquiries. Many local authorities did no publicise an email addres for election enquiries, and where they did it was often in tiny type (10 point).
After discussing issues such as the lack of time given to voters to return ballot papers and declaration of identity, as well as concerns over coercion and capacity, the report concludes that, in general, all-postal elections are "inherently inaccessible and restrict the ability of some of the electorate to vote independently".
Further, the 2004 all-postal pilots were more inaccessible than they need have been: "the whole process could be made simpler and more user friendly".
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Saturday, August 28, 2004
How much do people want Gmail?
I've given away three invitations, and have four more to hand out, so I decided to check out Gmailswap.
Some of today's more interesting offers include:
To paint your house for free
Jaco Pastorius solo album
My entire list of contacts
My iTunes library
The first copy of my bands [sic] single
A tour of Venezia on my boat
Some new argyle socks
A can of potted possum
Undoubtedly there will be some scammers in there.
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Dear Valued Customer
Dear Valued Customer, You Are a Loser, by Rick Broadhead, who states it was "born out of my attempts to document and catalog some of the strangest and most memorable technological oddities of all time," gets a review on Wired:
Take, for instance, the case of the Ukrainian businessman who put 50 new pagers -- a gift for his employees -- in the back seat of his car and then promptly crashed into a lamppost when they all began beeping at the same time. The culprit? A welcome message sent by the pager company to each of the pagers. Though it hasn't caused an accident yet, I do find the messages continuously sent out by mobile operators more than irritating. While away from the UK and on roaming, messages seem to land every few hours, for example when the operator changes as I move around town, or when my home operator wants me to buy into its 'cheap' evening calls 'home' each day. Sometimes it's such an irritation that I decide to switch off.
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All-postal voting verdict
The UK Electoral Commission has just published its reports on all-postal voting. These include an overall report 'Delivering democracy? The future of postal voting', as well as evaluation reports for the regions. There's also the usual Scope report on accessibility of the all-postal pilots.
Press coverage includes The Guardian and BBC Online, and Jason Kitcat has also provided highlights on his blog.
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New season's events
As the summer draws to a close, event planners are busily finalising their autumn schedules.
AIGA Experience Design's September event on film title design coincides with the Saul Bass exhibition at the Design Museum; Sussex University hosts the Association of Internet Researchers (AoIR) conference, Jimmy Wales is in town to talk about Wikipedia, and think tanks and special interest groups have plenty of new food for the brain on subjects from taxonomy to e-government.
See my events calendar page for more information...
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Friday, August 27, 2004
Intuitive
The Usabalympics 2004 is the latest addition to OK/Cancel. I like the reference to Jeff Raskin's 1994 article Intuitive Equals Familiar, on the theme of 'intuitive' versus 'intuitable'.
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Voting technologies update
Some late August coverage of voting technology issues:
The New Hanging Chads (New York Times, subscription required)
Disaster puts kink in election planning (Southwest Florida News-Press) reports on how hurricane damage could affect the primary.
Techies Praised for E-Vote Work (Wired) looks at the relationships between the US Election Assitance Commission, IEEE and the rest of the techies. Despite what the article says, participation by vendors in the standards process is (a) widespread and considered normal, across technologies, and (b) much less dominant in the e-voting arena than in other areas.
E-Vote Machines: Secret Testing (Wired) reports on the firms responsible for voting technology certification.
California green lights e-voting (The Register) briefly reports on developments from the California state certification process.
Poll: Voters Want Paper Trail (Wired) reports the results of various public opinion surveys.
I'll update the e-voting pages when I have a moment.
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Thursday, August 26, 2004
DVD extras
Interesting piece on today's Front Row (BBC Radio 4) on DVD extras:
ubiquitous commentaries: "...can you imagine someone like David Lynch doing a commentary over Mulholland Drive..." featurettes: "It's like calling a commercial a feature film..." deleted scenes: "...work that would normally have been shredded is now available..." alternate versions: "...what do you take as the finished film?" interactive menus: "...when will DVD manufacturers realise that interactive menus are not a special feature, they are a practical necessity? They can't be listed on the back as a bonus. It's just like saying the steering wheel in a car is a bonus. It's not a bonus, it's necessary to control the DVD..." alternative endings...
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Wikipedia
Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia, will be giving a talk at Oyster in London on Tuesday. (Thanks to Dave at NTK.)
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Taking notes and managing references
Dave Weinberger asks what people use for taking notes, and points to this note taking list. Several blog comments point to further programs, one of the more favourably reviewed being an old one, Ecco. Yes, it would be great idea to be able to combine outlines and bibliographies in the way he describes.
I'm looking for a decent notetaker, so may give Ecco Pro (available for free download at ftp://ftp.netmanage.com/pub/support/pub/utilities/EC401/Ecco32/ ) a run around the block.
Meanwhile David Brake provides some handy links to free programs for managing references.
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What's mine is yours?
Over the period 1992-1999, I calculate I wrote around 1,700 articles, most of which were published in monthly, weekly and daily offline media. Many of these were extensive pieces, in the 1,500 to 4,000-word range, and a high proportion were based on significant quantities of personal research (interviews, visits and so on).
While I'm often happy for people to republish material subject to certain conditions, I'm rather stunned at the number of organisations who take it upon themselves to republish copyright articles of mine without any reference to me, in order to shore up their businesses.
Today's example: I get an email from website owner A, asking for permission to republish an article of mine that he tells me appears on website B. Which is how I find out that a copyright article of mine - based on interviews I conducted in 1999 - is on B's website, where it's being used to promote B's business (a firm with offices in the UK and US in direct competition with my own). A also asks if he should state that the article was originally published by B.
Following a complaint from me, B this morning agrees to withdraw my article immediately: "We apologise for the articles [sic] placement on the website without your consent, I am unable to explain how this may have happened..." He thanks me "for my understanding in this matter".
I'll now need to thank A, and let him know that the article was not originally published by B, but that B just decided to lift it without permission to use in the promotion of his own business. The problem with this continuous plundering is that in the end nobody knows who published it, who wrote it, when it was written, whether it is copyright, or indeed whether the article is being republished in its original form. This is all essential metadata that contributes to the authority, or otherwise, of the article.
4:42 PM|
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Movable Type
Richard Allan MP is one of several bloggers who have recently suggested they intend to move away from Movable Type. The main interaction complaint seems to be comment spam on MT.
3:22 PM|
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Gmail invitations
Having just invited Tom, I've still got four spare Gmail invitations....
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Mobile phone escapes into the wild
Have you noticed how mobile phones with vibrating alert switched on can jump around?
I like to have vibrating alert switched on - as my hearing can be pretty duff in noisy surroundings - but I had a strange experience yesterday: while lunching at Kettner's, my phone escaped from the back pocket of my trousers, dropped to the velveteen seating, fell between two sections of benching and ended up under the the window. As I was crawling around under the bench, I almost expected to find a nest of phones gathering together.
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Blogvertorial
More discussions of blogvertorial over on Wired News.
1:21 PM|
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Technical white papers
Russell Willerton is conducting a survey on white papers in technical communication practice (see this post by Beth Mazur on IDblog):
White papers are all but absent from our textbooks and our courses, and yet the number of white papers in industry is on the rise...
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Tuesday, August 24, 2004
Wanadoo
Wanadoo (formerly Freeserve) has hit the headlines this afternoon over a new cheap broadband offer. Its home page currently looks a bit of a mess. Perhaps a massive product launch is not the right time to be fiddling with the home page.

Crikey. I've just checked (6.47pm) the Wanadoo home page again, and it's still looking like someone's first attempt in an HTML evening class. Perhaps the webmaster's off on holiday...
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Transforming the weather
First we had banner blindness. Now there's the phenomenon of 'weather blindness', where viewers sit through weather bulletins but by the end still don't know what the weather will be like.
Isobars, cold and warm fronts, and icon clutter are apparently to be done away with by BBC weather news, to be replaced by landscapes showing currently weather and predictions based on Met Office models. The new approach combines improved weather data processing with graphics upgrades.
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Public sociology
The American Sociological Association's conference took place in San Francisco last week. Jonathan Steele has written an opinion piece on the ASA and the recent rise of public sociology in the US.
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One, two, many
Here's the New Scientist article that all the newspapers have been quoting over the last week on the counting concepts employed by a certain Brazilian tribe.
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Tom Peters is now blogging...
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Political conference blogging
Over on Voxpolitics, James Crabtree covers plans afoot for political blogging over the UK conference season.
In the spirit of James's Bob the Builder post title - 'can we blog it? yes we can' - perhaps what political blogging needs is a mascot and a strapline...
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Gmail invitations
I wonder if anyone else is having this problem with Gmail: I have a home page link 'invite 2 friends to Gmail', plus umpteen links on individual emails that offer the same...but none of them work.
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Monday, August 23, 2004
Bedford Square
Ian Brown hosted a lovely informal BBQ in the peace and quiet of the very green and lovely Bedford Square gardens (panorama) yesterday. Other burnt offering eaters included Chris Marsden of Oxford Internet Institute, and others from the highly incestuous UCL/LSE/SOAS axis. We played six degrees of Ian Brown while Ian was off trying to find a source of fire.
Bedford Square, perhaps the best-preserved Georgian square in London, features around half a dozen blue plaques and Coade stone (invented by Eleanor Coade of Lambeth) around its many doorways.
Ian, who was until recently Director of the Foundation for Information Policy Research, is going to be working full time at UCL from next month, so we'll be in the same department.
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Sunday, August 22, 2004
Blogger stats
I've just filled out my profile on Blogger, which has then fed back certain stats I wasn't aware of:
average posts per week: 5 outbound links: 964 number of words written: 88,083
(all since November 2002)
So over the last 18 months, I've been posting an average of once every working day, with going on for 2 links in every post. And volume-wise I've written the equivalent of a book.
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Saturday, August 21, 2004
Geeks head for the beach
Joel on Software: Selected Essays currently stands at no. 71 in the Amazon UK top 100 hot books.
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Have you been bitten?
I'm ploughing my way through Why Things Bite Back: Technology and the Revenge Effect, by Edward Tenner, picked up for a song at the Victoria Oxfam Bookshop (Victoria, London), which always has at least half a dozen cheap good finds.
Tenner describes a variety of revenge effects, for example:
the repeating effect - having to do the same thing more often rather than gaining free time to do other things e.g. with so-called labour-saving devices the rearranging effect - the impact is shifted elsewhere, such as with air-con systems the recomplicating effect - something is simplified but something else gets more complicated e.g. redial is added, but so is a call stacking system the regenerating effect - something multiplies the problem, such as exploding Scuds with Patriot missiles the recongesting effect - a space that starts as a new frontier and then soon becomes as crowded as the space that people left, such as spectrum
Here's Chapter 5 for free on the Business Week website.
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McGovern and blogging
This week (newsletter dated 23 August) Gerry McGovern 'tackles' blogs.
Well, not really. What he has to say could be written on the back of a postage stamp. He has five points in favour, four points against, and can't think of anything else to say really...It's not clear what kind of blogs he's talking about, but then it doesn't really matter as, he says, he doesn't have a blog, and newsletters work fine for him...
Is this the worst analysis of blogging I've ever seen? I know it's August, but I've yet to see anything so downright lazy and ill-informed.
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Apples and circuses
The Register reports that an Apple store is to open on Regent Street, just south of Oxford Street, on 20 November. A welcome arrival in London indeed.
Though I can understand the company doesn't want to be in with the tech-totty on Tottenham Court Road, I'm not sure about the street-fashion location...H&M, Top Shop, Shelleys Shoes and ...Apple?
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No blogs: we're the International Olympic Committee
First we had attendees at the Olympics banned from wearing clothing showing logos from non-sponsor companies.
Now Wired reports that Olympic athletes and their support personnel are prohibited from blogging or otherwise writing about the Olympics:
The IOC's rationale for the restrictions is that athletes and their coaches should not serve as journalists -- and that the interests of broadcast rightsholders and accredited media come first. The worst kind of protectionism, and confirmation that the Olympic organisers are more concerned with commercial considerations than promoting sport.
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US e-voting
Wired News reports on the US Election Assistance Commission concerning the relationship with IEEE, with quotes from EAC commissioner DeForest Soaries.
Standards developed by the IEEE technical committee on e-voting are likely to be either adopted or used as a basis for future US federal e-voting standards.
Those involved in IEEE standards drafting for usability include fellow UPA Voting and Usability Project members Whitney Quesenbery and Josie Scott.
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Friday, August 20, 2004
More Dilbert
And yet more product designer stuff from Dilbert this week (see Wednesday's post):
Thursday Friday
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Microsoft: Linguistic, political and cultural boo-boos
As someone who is both a qualified translator and a user experience professional, I took a particular interest in press reports from this week's International Geographical Union conference in Glasgow about the cockups made by Microsoft when trying to roll out software around the world. It's been covered by both Guardian and CNet News.
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Thursday, August 19, 2004
Sins of questionnaires
Is August the peak of the questionnaire season? Maybe. It's certainly the time of year when many Master's students are doing their dissertations, often backed up by surveys.
I'll fill in questionnaires if I have time, and if the questionnaire looks worthwhile and do-able.
Ways to stop me filling in a questionaire:
1. Send me the questionnaire two days after the stated deadline.
2. Send me an anonymous, mass-mailed email written in an irritated tone, telling me that you sent me the questionnaire last week - when you didn't - and that I haven't returned it completed.
3. Introduce your questionnaire with an incoherent text that contravenes numerous rules of English grammar and punctuation. If you can't draft a short text that's coherent and correct, you probably shouldn't be drafting questionnaires.
4. Send the questionnaire to large numbers of email addresses for people who are not appropriate respondents. This is called spam.
5. Don't tell me what your name is.
6. Provide questions that are badly thought out. For example, a question that asks 'How often [...] in the last month?
a) Almost every day b) 1-5 times a week c) 1-3 times a month d) Less than once a month
has several problems:
- (a) and (b) are very similar, and respondents won't know which to select: some will opt for (a), some for (b), some will miss out the question, and some will not bother with the questionnaire if all the questions are like this.
- There seems to be a 'month squared' going on in options (c) and (d).
- What about people who do this many times a day or every day? There is no option for them to choose, and no 'other' category either.
7. Send me a questionnaire about a website, but don't ask whether I've ever visited it. Is the assumption that I'll answer the questionnaire without visiting the site? Or that I'll visit the site to answer the questionnaire? What kind of data quality is expected from this?
8. Draft the entire questionnaire based on an assumption that I come from a particular audience/market/user segment, without explicitly stating what this is, or on the assumption that you are the - only - participant model for the questionnaire.
It's difficult enough to get people to fill in questionnaires. Why make it harder on yourself by committing basic questionnaire sins?
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Wednesday, August 18, 2004
Bermondsey lunch
Tom Smith (the Other blog) and me are attempting to get another Bermondsey user experience-blogging etc lunch together for next Friday (27 August), probably at The Garrison on Bermondsey Street.
How are you Bermondsey/south London folks fixed? Any takers? Well actually, you don't have to be Bermondsey...but it helps ;-)
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I am not a PR agency
I get quite a few emails that go something like this:
As a blogger focusing on news and trends within the technology sector, I thought that you would be interested in this innovative X from Y company. Please consider covering this new product in your blog. [Uf! Unattached participle: "As a blogger...., I...." and he's not the blogger: Someone send him a copy of Fowler.]
I got another couple today. One involved a product that claims to solve the spaghetti junction nightmare of home multimedia systems, but it's for products from a large multinational that has a poor history of usability.
I am not a PR. Perhaps if I had the device/system and could assess it, or if I had some evidence of its usability and/or user experience, I could write something. But I don't do PR. Sorry.
4:58 PM|
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Cunning plods and credit cards for criminals
I see many articles about people being bombarded with unwanted junk mail. If only life were so simple. In my own case, a person who once rented this property is a fugitive from various authorities: the Metropolitan Police and Transport for London (a spot of grevious bodiliy harm to a bus driver in the middle of Brixton), around a dozen councils, the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency in Cardiff, courts high and low, a multitude of bailiffs across the country, and many others he owes money to or has wronged in some way.
Having tried to resolve this problem for 18 months, and battled against its repercussions, I've found that (a) the cheeky chappie goes under a number of assumed names, and nobody, including the police, seems to know what his real name is; (b) bailiffs are bigger liars than politicians, PR people and journalists put together; (c) plods (aka police) can be more cunning than we give them credit for; and (d) while it's possible to convince DVLA to change the registered address for a vehicle, it's not possible to get the address for a driver changed. Only the driver him- or herself can change the address recorded for them.
So unless our fugitive from justice kindly helps the authorities himself, there is no chance of stopping the onslaught of court papers, police officers on my doorstep, threats from bailiffs, and general blighting of my life. You see, he continues to give this address, there are new offences arising all the time, and organisations continue to look to DVLA in search of contact details for the rogue male. The Brixton police did bravely have a bash at trying to stake him out via his pregnant girlfriend - when she was due to turn up for an ante-natal appointment - but that didn't work out.
The guy gets quite a few credit offers from banks, under his selection of assumed names. I'm surprised that banks are so keen to offer credit cards to a wanted man, and also concerned about all this material circulating in an area of London where the postal service seems to 'lose' as many items as it delivers.
Today, I received two more offers: one from HSBC - extremely helpful on the phone when I got in touch to explain the situation - and another from Capital One.
It appears impossible to speak to any human being at Capital One. Perhaps the company just doesn't employ humans. The only number in the credit card pack - purportedly for such things as requesting large print or Braille application forms - only works for existing customers with an account number (bad luck for the visually disabled applicant). The website numbers aren't any more helpful. Capital is among the merry band of organisations that will only allow comment or complaint in snail mail writing, presumably to discourage what it doesn't want to hear.
So rather than writing yet more letters to people who fail to listen, I'm blogging about it, perhaps just to get the frustration out of my system.
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Council tax call centres
Having just spent 16 minutes trying to get through to the council tax call centre for Southwark, I'm not in the best of moods. But then last time I spent over two hours trying to get through and was then unceremoniously cut off, so it's all relative, I suppose. Once I got through today, I had an interesting conversation with the call centre worker. She told me she generally tried to get rid of callers as soon as possible, but it was a relief to have a conversation once in a while. "We've just opened a new office near London Bridge, and this week callers have been telling me they've 'only' spent 15 or 20 minutes hanging on the line, and how good this is compared to their past experiences." So people have pretty low expectations of councils. She encouraged me to write a letter of complaint to the 'customer feedback unit' at the town hall snail mail address as, apparently, there is no way to register such a complaint with the call centre.
It never ceases to amaze me how an organisation can so successfully sabotage its main source of income. Most people calling the council tax office are trying to figure out ways of paying money to the council, after all.
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Usability Professionals' Association: UPA Voice
The latest edition of UPA Voice is now online. Topics include e-bill usability, user-centred deliverables, and participating in the voting and usability project.
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A handbag?
For a while, I've been thinking of doing a piece on what women carry in their handbags these days. Then today, Woman's Hour on BBC Radio 4 beat me to it.
As someone who has bought five handbags in four countries so far this year - neat trick for packing newly acquired handbags when there's no room in your luggage: put one handbag inside another - perhaps I'm atypical. But here goes with some of the stuff in mine:
glasses and sunglasses - you'll never know which you'll need; the sunglasses are prescription, just so I don't go blind when I switch over compact umbrella various coloured pens and a pencil highlight pens in two colours small post-it notes - excellent for so many purposes, such as marking interesting passages in books (see below), scribbling a piece of info to give to someone that they can stick somewhere, doing a quick research download session ibuprofen and paracetemol - it really helps to get work done if you can help sort out other people's headaches mints picked up from corporate reception desks - someone's always got a cold or cough flash drive - this gets pretty intensive use; on the few occasions I go out without, it always turns out we need to transfer data; and it's small digital camera and digital voice recorder with small external mic - tools of the trade business cards - always running out small hardbound notebook with elastic band - easy to keep loose bits of paper secure in the back; I have a favourite one that Rymans sells mobile phone PowerPoint remote - nobody's ever got one when they need it tissue pack - apart from the obvious, also good for mopping up spilt coffee, making sure a desk is clean and dry before spreading paper materials out, or even stopping a table from wobbling transport pack: while in London, small A-Z, London bus, tube and rail map; travel cards and travel discount cards; map printouts for other locations several dozen library cards health and insurace cards and info book or long article/paper - I try to make the most of travel time, and pre-meeting time, to catch up on reading keys Carmex lip balm - my all-time favourite lip balm silk cardigan - it rolls into a tiny space, and is good for summer and winter temperature changes ...and, of course, money
This may sound like everything but the kitchen sink to some people, but everything gets used most weeks, or gets missed if it isn't there. And it all fits into a surprisingly small space. Just don't mug me!
11:08 AM|
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Dis-service Pack
Microsoft's Service Pack 2 (SP2) is just about to hit our computers. So it's a little disconcerting to find that so many programs may experience 'issues' (in the words of Microsoft) once SP2 is installed. These include PageMaker, Photoshop Elements, Jaws, Cute FTP, ViaVoice, Quicken (accounts), Encylopedia Britannica, Real Player, Nero, various McAfee and Norton programs, PCAnywhere; and even a range of Microsoft products such as various flavours of Office XP, Outlook, Visual Studio, Visual Basic...
I think I'll be hanging on to see what develops rather than installing.
The company has provided a full list.
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Worthiness, fun and affirmations
Last night, speakers got feedback from the Usability Professionals' Association 2004 conference sessions. For the e-voting panel, feedback was good but low key. I think this was partly because this subject matter is heavy duty, and the panel brought together a pretty specialised group of speakers that will rarely be found in the same place. So serious stuff, lots of really important messages, and not many opportunities to put those messages across outside of this event. As a panel we had a mission, so maybe we didn't make them laugh too much: 'important, interesting, worthwhile, good mix, knowledgeable'. Perhaps we were a little on the 'worthy' side.
On the other hand, the riotous 'Why do field studies?', which brought together Ginny Redish, Thyra Rauch from IBM, Susan Dray of Dray Associates, and me, (yes, an all-female panel) got plenty of reports in the 'punchy, fun, excellent, great' categories, and remarks such as 'best panel yet'. (It was also nice to get a personal mention from people who were in the audience, but I think this largely came down to certain remarks I made that had the audience in stitches of laughter...If learning can be entertaining, all the better.)
This second panel was pretty spontaneous: someone dropped out early in the week, the admin aspect was a little chaotic, Ginny joined, then Susan Dray also right at the last minute (as we were sitting down in front of the mics), and nobody quite knew what was going to happen. (I'd even prepared some slides - out of pure nervousness - that never got shown. I'm sure they'll be useful in the future.) I think nobody felt that there was a 'body of knowledge' that needed to be conveyed - people talk about field studies quite frequently, and there's a fair few people able to do so - and everyone was relaxed, and adapted on the hoof to issues raised by the audience. It was all great fun.
Yesterday, Misbehaving covered the issue of women speaking at conferences, which supported the importance of provocation and humour in making an impact. It also raised the issue of preparation and 'practising your speech'. I'd say that while you need to know your subject matter, you also need a good narrative style; things need to sound spontaneous, not leaden or prepared to death.
Lastly, some general advice for getting out there and heard: following up on Molly Holzschlag's recent musings on women, tech and publishing, Tiffany Brown offered these daily affirmations for women in technology (thanks to J D Lasica). According to Tiffany, women don't know the rules of the game, or worse, don't know there is a game.
10:26 AM|
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Dibert and design
Function? Design? Emotion? Quality? This week Dilbert does product design:
Tuesday Wednesday
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Monday, August 16, 2004
Voting history
Over on Confusability, Chris McEvoy has an interesting post today about a voting history exhibition at the Smithsonian. And as always, Chris has some nice graphics, and a good title: Making an exhibition of democracy.
Chris raises some questions that can probably only be answered accurately by US voters, but I'll have a stab:
Q: Many state election laws allowed voters to modify party tickets. Voters could "split" their ticket by scratching out the name of one candidate and writing in another, or by gluing on a strip of paper (called a paster) printed with the name of yet another person. Is this optional candidate technology still available in the US?
A: I understand 'write in' votes (for someone not on the ballot) are still allowed in many counties/states, though I'm not sure about the gluing!
Q: Was the vote invalid if you didn't close the curtains properly?
A: Some machines didn't function until you closed the curtain...or rather didn't open/allow you to open the curtain until the vote was cast...I think some of them are still around. In one area of Texas, I believe, this function was inadvertently disabled several decades ago, allowing voters to leave the booth while their votes still hung in the balance.
Q: Did you have to provide your own white gloves?
A: Ha ha. As anyone who has watched Little Britain will know, 'a lady' (Emily Howard) always has white gloves to hand (in the UK at least). Do keep up, Chris!
1:41 PM|
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Solutions and problems
I really enjoy Simon Caulkin's regular management column in The Observer. This week, Simon tackles the 'E-binge that will cost us dear':
It's an article of faith that e-government is 'a good thing'. [...] But what's it all for? [...] until now no one has bothered to find out what people actually want from e-government. As the 2005 deadline approaches, so little is known that the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister, which is responsible for pushing local authorities online, has launched a £2.5m 'e-citizen national project' - a marketing wheeze to discover "what makes an e-citizen tick" and to catapult e-government take-up to success.'
You might think that was something to be done before spending £7.4bn. Once again, in the absence of research, we have solutions looking for problems.
In last year's research for Getting By, Not Getting On (The Work Foundation), I found that even local government heads of ICT were sceptical of the business case for putting many services online. In fact at one London council, research showed that the biggest demand among local residents was for someone on the end of a telephone, to answer queries, solve problems or take payments. Many elderly residents just want to talk to someone...and don't have a home computer.
We may discuss whether the function of local government is to respond to the wishes of residents, or to operate in the most efficient manner possible. But government is elected, and is perhaps not in a position to force e-government where it's not wanted.
10:44 AM|
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Design sidelined by UK firms
In Creatives need not apply, Roger Mavity laments the lack of attention paid to design and designers by UK business:
There's a very British belief that the world of ideas is peripheral to our commercial success, whereas I think it is central.[...] We have the creative talent, we have the design imagination, but we do not have the belief that such talent should be at the heart of a business.
9:27 AM|
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Sunday, August 15, 2004
Chikinki
I've been in happy summer-listening-to-far-too-many-bands mode recently. Among them Chikinki, hailing from Bristol. According to the band's website, "Hate TV", the first single from Lick Your Ticket, their current album, is a "darkly romantic electro-glam stomp of majestically wasted beauty about a girl who doesn't get on with technology".
"It's about whther you can deal with that these days," explains band member Rupert, "when everything is TV and computers."
My fave is "Drink", from the same album.
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Guilty: Watching TV while driving
News media reported on Friday that a UK student has been prosecuted and fined for watching TV while driving. According to the BBC report, he "admitted driving while a screen was visible".
UK law on what you can do while driving has changed in response to concerns about mobile phone use by drivers. Regulations now state that use of non-handheld navigation equipment, mobile phones and so on is legal.
Is watching TV while driving substantially different from monitoring a screen-based navigation device while driving? And what about research that hands-free in-car phone use can be as dangerous as using a hand-held phone? As long ago as 2002, research from the UK Transport Research Laboratory showed that hands-free car kits were almost as dangerous as hand-held phones.
The issue here is that what the driver is looking at, and what s/he is doing with their hands, is only part of the problem; the other part is the driver's attention or lack of it. There's research in this area, but it's mostly buried in the cognitive psychology and cognitive ergonomics literature.
It's odd that in-car navigation aids are being seen as an unalloyed 'good thing', while evidence is growing - even in widely published research - concerning the attention demands on the driver and the effect these can have.
By the way, the guilty student was watching The Invisible Man, a film based on HG Wells' horror story about the power of being invisible thanks to a serum with some dangerous effects.
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Saturday, August 14, 2004
Gmail extensions
I blogged a few weeks ago that Gmail doesn't yet have a mail import function. Now I see there's already a host of Gmail extensions out on the Web, including one to import existing email into Gmail, and another to access Gmail via a POP3 mail client. A number have been listed on Mark Lyon's website.
11:31 AM|
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Speaker feedback
Last week's Economist reports on tech conference blogging providing instant feedback to conference speakers:
...Attendees can now look up from their laptops and, without making eye contact with the people sitting next to them, read what everybody else is saying about the panel discussion. The appeal is obvious.
Geeks sometimes want to shut up other geeks, but don't know how to do it gracefully. So now they can blog it on to the screen. This is how Steve Mills, the software boss of IBM and, to some attendees, a sort of buttoned-down, corporate geek, was dispatched during his keynote address at AlwaysOn, a conference in Palo Alto last month. As Mr Mills held forth about things being “leveraged” and the “empowering” effect of “modular design and componentisation”, the dialogue on the screen next to him became agitated. “Blah blah say something!” read one blog. “OK, bring in the hook, enough of the IBM commercial,” said another. “Seriously, what is this dribble...what a waste of 45 minutes,” read a third. As a means of getting rid of dull conference speakers, this is one technological breakthrough that deserves to spread fast. This assumes the speakers concerned have some control over what they are saying; but I think certain corporations perform brainwashing as part of their induction programme.
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Friday, August 13, 2004
Women in IT
The Register reports today:
The Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC) is carrying out a "major investigation" to discover why there are so few women working in the ICT sector.
It wants to hear from employers and workers as part of an initiative to understand what makes the industry "tick" and why so many women are put-off getting into ICT.
Plugging Britain's Skills Gap revealed that the number of women working in the industry has fallen recently from 23 per cent to 20 per cent. Part of this is blamed on the industry's "poor image", particularly among girls who might otherwise be attracted to work in the industry. I believe that the usability/user experience field is an exception to the general pattern within the ICT sector: there is a significant proportion of women in the business, and that proportion is stable. I wonder whether this has something to do with (a) the subject matter and (b) the way the business is organised.
For those of you who love filling in questionnaires, the EOC have one on their website (deadline for Friday 27 August).
8:25 PM|
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Blogs v The New York Times
J.D. Lasica (newmediamusings blog) guest blogs on the phoenix-like Industry Standard (reincarnated as blog) today and looks at some brand-new stats from Technorati on where people are getting their information.
Who has the ear of the blogosphere? shows that blog sources now figure high on the ladder of information sources, with Plastic, Boing Boing and Instapundit ahead of many traditional media such as Fox News and Reuters. I'm glad to see that UK media that opted for major website development a few years back - the BBC and The Guardian - are up there in the worldwide top ten.
But - and it's a big but - these figures refer to where bloggers, not ordinary mortals, get their information. A blogger with a blogroll is pretty much bound to put other bloggers on it (I can think of a very few bloggers who adopt the island approach). Bloggers are part of a universe of personal voices, and what's more personal than another blogger? I'm not convinced that couch-potato man is switching on to Blogistan, though if the journalists on the newspapers he reads are doing so, that would be an interesting development.
Dan Gillmor also addresses journalism v blogs in Wired News this week.
4:05 PM|
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AI as alchemy
Interesting piece in yesterday's Guardian Life supplement by artificial intelligence person Steve Grand, on the limitations of AI:
AI is to natural intelligence what alchemy was to chemistry: we're valiantly mixing things together to see what happens, but we lack the right conceptual framework; we have no periodic table. If it hadn't been for alchemists there would be no chemistry, so I mean no slur. It's simply that the problem is incredibly difficult.
The sad thing is that people really do believe what they see in the movies, and this suggests they badly underestimate their own intelligence. Anyone who thinks they could be replaced by a jumped-up laptop needs help with their self-image.
It's our very intelligence that prevents us from seeing the scale of the challenge: by the time we become aware of the world our brains have already solved most of the problems.
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Thursday, August 12, 2004
Design(?) without users
In How do they do it?, Donna Maurer has written about how people still 'design' without user-centred design. In other words, they and their clients just make something up and implement it (often at vast expense).
Yes, it's scary. But I have to admit, most of my work comes from picking over the debris of such systems design disasters, where people have implemented something and then found it's a white elephant that nobody uses. And it suddenly occurs to them, after spending (wasting) large six-seven figure sums, that perhaps they should have done some user research (often only a five-figure sum) to start with. Systems design without research can work out very expensive.
The scariest thing is when this happens in major mission-critical or safety-critical systems. Such as some ten-figure-sum public sector projects.
Experiences: 1. Go into software company: company management says nobody is allowed to talk to users. 2. Go into major public sector client organisation of software house producing dedicated software: client systems manager says nobody from the software house except the sales people has ever even visited their premises - in eight years - let alone talked to potential users. 3. Speak to dozens of users at an international 'white elephant' system site: users fall over themselves to talk and show, and are keen to be informed of the outputs from your user research. Nobody has ever visited them before, in relation to this or any - of around 25 in-house - systems.
1:47 PM|
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HCI on Radio 4
Bravo. The University of York's HCI Group, usable home technology, and the very words 'human-computer interaction', all get a mention on today's You and Yours (BBC Radio 4):
"The point is what technology can do for people [...] We start with the people and how they behave, rather than with the technology and what it can do." Well said (though I can't find any trace of the project on the York website).
[BBC Radio 4 Listen again: This programme should get posted to the website once the broadcast is over; this is the last item in the programme]
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Wednesday, August 11, 2004
Child's play
A Javascript variation on the Fisher-Price Voting Device (below).

7:31 PM|
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British Library website: same old story
From this week's UK e-Government Bulletin:
The British Library needs to improve the usability of its web site and ensure its digital collection is sustainable beyond the short term, according to a new report into the library's remote services.
The National Audit Office report finds the library's web site is difficult and confusing to navigate and has not been designed with the user in mind but to reflect the internal structure of the library.
However the site (http://www.bl.uk), accessed by over two million people annually, has performed consistently well in the area of accessibility to users with a disability, the report says. According to a spokesperson, the library's site will be redesigned next year. "We'll be consulting other groups and organisations to ensure our web site is as user friendly as possible," she said. National Audit Office report on the British Library
7:16 PM|
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Public value, ICT in healthcare, and HCI academics
I've just trawled my way through Jamie Bend's recent report, Public Value and e-Health, from UK think tank IPPR (published at the end of July).
It's a good secondary analysis of the state of public sector e-health in the UK, based on examination of a range of research reports published over the last four years or so.
Bend rightly points to evaluation of systems and IT projects as being a major stumbling block: so often evaluation has been relegated to a back burner or hasn't happened at all. I'm interested to note he believes that the idea of ICT in healthcare as a 'good thing', for its own sake, is now disappearing from the government agenda; I hope he's right.
Bend's report gives a minor emphasis on the importance of 'consultation' with users. For example, he refers on p67 to the Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology's report on government ICT projects, New NHS ICT, which pointed to three significant reasons why user involvement is essential. Bend rightly sees this lack of involvement as a stumbling block for effectiveness of ICT systems within the NHS.
However, as with all reports from social science-dominated institutions, there is no mention of how users might be involved in the context of system design, or of the idea that systems can be 'designed' at all. Those in government reading the report - generally other social scientists and arts graduates - will be labouring under a similar knowledge black hole. Too often, user 'consultation' is seen by social scientists and government policy makers as 'telling people what they're going to get' (Bend reports this is precisely what has happened in many NHS projects), or at most, sending out a market research-style questionnaire; the NHS has been inundated by the latter. Such 'communication' is far removed from what is needed for user-centred design.
I believe getting social science-trained administrators and policy makers - the people that make the major project decisions - to understand what 'requirements gathering' means in practice, and what they consequently need to demand from system providers, is a major challenge that has yet to be addressed by the HCI/human factors community. Where is the knowledge transfer? But perhaps asking people to spend less time presenting repetitive papers at arcane conferences, and more time communicating real world needs to those who need to know, is unreasonable (within current reward structures), though there might indeed be more 'public value' in it.
3:28 PM|
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Lou Rosenfeld coming to London
Lou Rosenfeld will be in London on 29 November, to give his Enterprise Information Architecture seminar. No longer part of the NN Group circus, this time Rosenfeld will be presenting under the auspices of Online Information 2004 at Olympia.
See the London events page.
2:57 PM|
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Tuesday, August 10, 2004
Google and Blogger
I thought that Google's takeover of Blogger would be, on the whole, a positive thing.
So far: I got a Blogger sweatshirt sent by Google (good and bad - blue is not my colour ;-) and I haven't worn it); the Blogger interface has, over a a number of small steps, improved considerably (good), though I haven't switched to the Blogger commenting system yet; my blog site is now being listed by Google results primarily by monthly archive date rather than the main current page (bad); I've been offered a gmail beta account (good-ish); and now individual blog posts are linked to by name, not number (good-ish/neutral), but suddenly seem to have lost most website formatting when linked to individually (very bad and no idea why this is happening - help!!). I'm sure this last item is just a temporary blip, but...I've figured out that I have to turn off Blogger comments (I'd never turned it on) and then disable 'post pages' (similarly)...
Ahah - I've now figured out why it was suddenly taking forever and a day to publish my site (every post was suddenly categorised as a separate page, without my knowledge).
It's disconcerting to have - adverse - changes inflicted without warning...
PS 12 August: Following a query to Blogger late on 10 August, Blogger person Steve has now sorted the 'post page' formatting problem. Considering Blogger is a free service, that's pretty fast problem reolution.
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Monday, August 09, 2004
Best practices for voting include usability
The US Election Assistance Commission has just published a Best Practices Toolkit for voting systems.
Number 8 on its ten election management tips for pre-election management is 'hire a usability consultant'.
I quote:
Creating more legible polling place signs, reader-friendly voter guides, clear voting instructions, easy-to-use touch screens, and user-friendly websites will make it easier for voters to participate, reduce voter errors and build good will on the part of the voting public. Usability consultants can help identify where such improvements can be made. Usability consultants are professionals who specialize in making forms and computer interfaces easier to use; they can make everything from the voter registration application to the ballot to the DRE touch screen unit more voter-friendly... Thanks to Whitney Quesenbery.
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Baggage security and human factors
A little while ago I wrote something about airport user experience, and was searching for something I'd read a few months back about baggage security systems at airports. I couldn't track it down. Then I suddenly remembered where I'd read it: Kim Vicente's recently published book, The Human Factor.
On pages 135-141, Vicente discusses some of the recent history of airport baggage security, in particular highlighting the psychological factors involved in system failure, and the risible training and testing undertaken by the US Federal Aviation Administration prior to 11 September 2001.
Essentially, baggage security is too often seen as a technology problem, when in fact it is a human problem: how to spot all the true positives (exceeedingly rare) without being inundated by false positives. People are very bad at performing extended vigilance tasks, with considerable drop-off after 30 minutes. Where baggage security is concerend, this is partly due to the fact that, at present, the fit between people and the technology they have to use is poor. But so-called clever technical solutions, despite considerable investment, are even worse performers.
In the book, Vicente refers to the FAA's Threat Image Projection (TIP) system, developed in co-operation with human factors engineers, which presented baggage security staff with realistic on-the-job training based on signal detection theory, and received an award from Aviation Week: "Unfortunately, the introduction of the award-winning system was 'slower than projected'. Improving the people-technology fit was apparently not a high priority in the airport security business before 11 September 2001".
I don't know what's happened to TIP since, but various sources suggest that US government expenditure on technology 'solutions' has most definitely increased.
By the way, the 9-11 report is available on the commission's website. This has some interesting things to say about the failures of checkpoint screening (see for example pp84-5).
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Catching up on voting
Recent press coverage of voting has included:
Fear of Fraud, a piece by Paul Krugman in the New York Times, pointing out that election administration should not be a partisan issue
Three articles recapping events in Florida: Florida Braces for Election (BBC), Election Troubles Already Descending on Florida (NY Times), and Server Crash Blitzes Florida's e-Voting Records (The Register)
A Crucial Vote for Venezuela and a Company, an article about the use of Smartmatic voting machines in the forthcoming (15 August) Venezuela referendum
Insurance for Electronic Votes, another editorial in the New York Times Making Votes Count series
(All NY Times articles require registration/subscription)
Information Professional (published by the Institute of Electrical Engineers) will shortly be publishing a piece that largely focuses on voting security.
I've been commissioned by Open Democracy and by the Design Council to write articles on voting, design and usability, which I'll link to once they are published (September).
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Sunday, August 08, 2004
DVD usability
I'm looking for a new DVD recorder, so I went to the Amazon (UK) site and found that Philips have several. So I checked out some reviews:
This was the single most difficult item of home equipment I have ever come across. The manual is hopeless, it only begins to make sense when you already know what you are doing. Connecting this, a Freeview box and Home Cinema unit all up to the TV and trying to get this to record and playback took some work. The remote also takes a lot of getting used to. Philips really should rethink user-friendliness, and learn from the likes of Panasonic. [Philips DVDR70]
On the downside, the instruction book is crap. I think I have now worked out that if you select a menu picture to record over ( all recordings are shown in Thumbnail picture format in the menu, so you go onto one, press record and it records from that point, wiping off that one and all following recordings), the one you are recording over does not automatically wipe off- only when the disc fills up. Nowhere does it detail this in the instructions. [Philips DVDR70]
Cons: Manual is very basic, remote control is cheap & nasty, menu system appalling. [Philips DVDR70] Or how about these, for the more expensive DVDR80 (currently retailing at £320):
A typical Philips product - generally technically superb, but with an abysmal user interface and in this case with a remote control unit the designer of which should be shot.
However, it is let down by the combination of cumbersome user interface and very poor remote control design (in so many respects). In particular, the fact that the remote control is very sensitive to position - ours won't work if you point it directly at the DVDR80 (it only works effectively if we point it at the white ceiling and let the recorder pick up the reflection!) - coupled with many operations taking several seconds before anything visually changes (so you don't know whether the recorder actually received the command or not) is amazingly frustrating. There is a "command received" indicator on the unit, which is effectively invisible with the unit more than a couple of feet away and so no help. Probably the single worst feature, however, is ">>"/"<<" and chapter forward/backwards being combined into two buttons (you hold chapter forwards for several seconds and it switches to ">>") - we have wasted literally hours scanning forwards or backwards after the unit did a chapter skip when we wanted ">>" or "<<". Other problems include the lack of lettering on the number buttons (these are the fastest way to enter titles, but this is apparently undocumented and the remote control buttons don't therefore have the letters printed). Etc. I wonder, does Philips ever read these?
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