Tag Archive for 'browsers'

An idea for the future of tabbed browsing

ideaAfter analyzing the results from the survey, we decided to create a concept that would afford piler and filer styles. We had to create a 3 minute video and a prototype. I think I’ll post the prototype, for which we made a comic, just because we had to scrape so much off the concept to make it to the required video length that I don’t think the video does a great job portraying the idea :S

I would have preferred to have a working mock up, but as we were all doing this as a side project and we had so many features, this proved impossible. So a comic had to do.  Should we have done something simpler which was easier to convey? Well, time was a constraint, there were no clear guidelines, no client, nothing at stake, so I think we just indulged: it’s a lot more fun to develop an idea than a prototype. And even if the philosophy behind the group of features we presented wasn’t explicit and we could be accused of lack of cohesion, the audience were experts in the industry, we expected them to be knowledgeable enough and trend-aware enough to put the pieces together and see the concept behind :)

You can see the prototype here.

Tabbed browsing usage results

tabs1

Some months ago, I asked you to complete a questionnaire about your tabbed browsing habits. Thanks! I got 99 responses. What follows is a brief summary of how I analyzed the data, the results I got and some analysis. Later we used the results to design an alternative to tabs for the Mozilla Labs Design Challenge summer 09 (with Maria and some help from Nico), but I’ll write about that later.

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Some research about tabbed browsing

I want to find out how people use and manage tabbed browsing. To do it, I need your help answering this questionnaire. It has only 7 questions and shouldn’t take you more than 10 minutes to answer. Thanks for your time :)

THIS SURVEY IS NO LONGER ACTIVE

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Browser error message redesign

browser_error

Around a month ago, I got to do my first solo project. With great power comes great responsibility and, luckily, the ability to choose the subject that better suits my interests :) And this is how I embarked on the redesign of browser error messages.

Browsers are old. It’s weird. I would have thought that major industry players would have figured out this kind of core issues by now. Error messages are not about new or experimental interactions, their design is probably as linked to basic UX design principles as can be. That’s why I was startled when I started to get the answers to my questionnaire… users mistaking DNS errors with HTTP 403 response codes and attributing SSL certificate warnings to malware. There’s a lot of educated talk on the web about how bad some error messages are, these however are savvy users’ rants and none of them come close to describing how the average users misses on their web experience, one of my participants even describing the experience as “distressing” :S

Anyway, after a week of questionnaires, qualitative analyses, guideline drafting and prototyping, I came to understand why error message design is not a popular discipline and some other interesting conclusions.

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