A Form Usability Checklist (ALA)
5th Jan. 2006
I'm a bit behind in hitting my usual reading material haunts but from my favourite web development magazine comes this fine article:
"Computers are supposed to make our lives easier, not more difficult. As usability-conscious designers, we can make our users’ lives easier by thinking about the way people interact with our websites, providing clear direction, and then putting the burden of sorting out the details in the hands of the computers—not the users.It’s that last part that we’re going to focus on here. We’ve all heard and read about big usability mistakes time and time again: “Don’t use images or flash for navigation,” “Don’t use Javascript for links,” and I certainly hope we’re all applying those lessons in our work. It’s often the smallest usability quirks, however, that create the biggest annoyances for users, especially when it comes to HTML forms. Follow these guidelines, and you’ll be off to a good start."
Read: Sensible Forms: A Form Usability Checklist
Categorized: Design , Usability
Search
Recent entries
- Explaining Information Architecture
- Prototyping the Julian Scarf
- Making of the Computer Graphics for Star Wars (Episode IV)
- Experibass
- Reac Table
- John Cage about silence
- The Fragmented Orchestra
- Voltage
Old articles
- Escaping Flatland: Towards Better Documentation for Information Architects (Eng./Chinese)
- Audio Interfaces for Online Environments
- Mental Models for Producers
- User Experience for Producers
- Information Design: An Introduction
- Visual Design for the Web
- Creating the User Experience
- Digital Story Telling
- Introduction to UX: Foundations, Navigation& Information Design, Information & Visual Design
