what can web applications learn from the harpsichord?
elaine wherryCo-founder, Meebo
classical music
internet
today
• Classical music 101• Why the baroque period relates to web
applications today• Moving forward…
medieval400-1400
medieval400-1400
renaissance1400-1600
renaissance1400-1600
baroque period1600-1750
baroque = “misshapen pearl”1600-1750
“Enough!” – Haydn
classical1750-1820
romantic1820-1910
• Medieval• Necessary technical development
• Renaissance• Initial instruments and craftsman
• Baroque• Mass adoption and experimentation
• Classical• Restraint and principles, craft to art
• Romanticism• Artistic maturity, full expression
timeline
emerging technology / medieval1940-1991
emerging technology / medieval1940-1991
mass adoption / renaissance1991-2005
mass adoption / renaissance1991-2005
experimentation / baroque2005-2010
baroque period is here
• Emphasis on doing as much as possible rather than trying to construct an underlying order• The ultimate destination site that does everything• Aggregators, API’s, open standards, widgets, frameworks• A misunderstanding of what the web does well – a collision of
the data presentation (pages and links) with the data manipulation world (windows and folders)
today
• how “so-and-so” does it• more intuitive• more professional• techier• friendlier• good feng shui• aesthetically-pleasing• less noisy
“this design is…”
pro-round• Smoother objects say hold me, sharp objects look dangerous• More congruous with our other technologies (cars, computers) that have become
rounded• It is more expensive, time-consuming, & difficult to produce rounded-corners, so
it implies better more technical skill, better value, attention to detail, greater desirability.
• We’ve evolved to like curved things – we eat round fruit, we’re attracted to round body parts, we stay away from sharp things (teeth). Have women ever gone out of style? No! Rounded corners are here to stay!
pro-square Simple and honest Bracing and solid. Shows technical-precision, advanced engineering. Demonstrate an appreciation for creating a content, information-focused site;
function over form. Embraces what html/css already does well. Shows advanced understanding of
how design and technology work together.
http://www.webelements.com/
“what are the true fundamentals of composition?” – Young Haydn
round• Rounded rectangles keep the eye focused in the center of
the object instead of the corners, create stronger visual containers
• Rounded rectangles typically require more whitespace in the design
square• Square page layouts and tabular data reinforce information
hierarchy• Stacked rectangles make it hard to tell what’s inside and out
WWHD?
Call to action & purpose
Strong defaults
80/20 rules
Designs targeted towards specific experiences are more successful
Can describe what it’s doing to your grandmother
Spatial chunking
Exposure likeness
Metaphor, mental model
Entry point
Progression & Continuity
Serialization of tasks
Error tolerance
Status messages
Confirmation
Eye dwells on busy areas, coast through free areas
Animations and movement reflect good continuums
Satisfaction & Confirmation
Garbage in, garbage out
Feedback
Performance
Consistency with expectations
Universal Principles of Design Lidwell, Holden, Butler
a similar appearance suggests similar behavior
Clickable!
Clickable!
Clickable!
Clickable!
Not clickable!
Clickable!
a different appearance suggests different behavior
• Filter elements are white
• Imdlg input element is blue
stacked
not stacked
visual effects map to physical space
“wait a second…” – Young Haydn
haydn’s lessons
1 To flout the rules, you must know the rules
2 Minimize ornamentation to maximize effect
3 …
4 …
to flout the rules, you must know the rules• Objective principles help:
• Sharpen your sensitivity to emotional and physical responses
• Facilitate good discourse
• Objective principles may not:• Account for emotional responses• Trump contextual issues
• You want to expect the unexpected• Focus the design, only innovate where necessary• False recaps, phony endings, musical pranks
haydn’s lessons
1 To flout the rules, you must know the rules
2 Minimize ornamentation to maximize effect
3 Use design principles for internal iteration
4 Prototype in your medium
esterházy palace
unparalleled iteration
rapid iteration
lab testing
bucket testing
guerilla usability
rapid iteration
“I was cut off from the world. There was no one near to confuse or torment me, I was forced to become original.”
- Haydn
internal evaluation
externalvalidation
usability evaluations
• Users can:• Validate that our mental models are successful• Participate in A/B test to optimize designs
• Users may not:• Tell us why they think the way they do• Create new designs
• We will be faster if:• We can iterate within our own teams faster• Use design principles to
high-fidelity prototyping
high-fidelity prototyping
prototyping
• Native OS• Pixel-level• Reusable UI components• Closer to the native language
haydn’s lessons
1 To flout the rules, you must know the rules
2 Minimize ornamentation to maximize effect
3 Use design principles for internal iteration
4 Prototype in your medium
do larger organizations naturally benefit?
• Good usability = predictability• Most users prefer what they see the most,
whether it’s good or bad• Do large organizations naturally benefit?
summary
1 To flout the rules, you must know the rules
2 Minimize ornamentation to maximize effect
3 Use design principles for internal iteration
4 Prototype in your medium
Image credits• Time travel clock: http://www.flickr.com/photos/bendodson/3402250681/• Medieval Church: http://www.flickr.com/photos/antmoose/102131833/• Pantheon: http://www.flickr.com/photos/misterjingo/1809727430/• Flea: http://www.flickr.com/photos/36128932@N03/3404894430/• Monte Python troubadoors: http://www.intriguing.com/mp/_pictures/grail/large/HolyGrail144.jpg• Renaissance books: http://www.flickr.com/photos/traceyp3031/2892438542/in/set-72157603791556092/
• Renaissance instruments: http://www.yesnet.yk.ca/schools/projects/renaissance/graphics/despreztwo.jpg• Late Renaissance chamber group: http://www.flickr.com/photos/allengarvin/3741207690/• Bernini's Cornaro chapel http://www.flickr.com/photos/aischylos/235801406/• The Adoration of the Magi, a 1624 • Sint-Pieter-en-Pauluschurch http://flickr.com/photos/e3000/82186320/• Vivaldi: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Antonio_Vivaldi.jpg• Bach: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Johann_Sebastian_Bach.jpg• Harpsichord: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c5/Clavecin_flamand.png• Haydn - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Haydn_portrait_by_Thomas_Hardy_(small).jpg• Beethoven: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Beethoven.jpg• Mozart: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1e/Wolfgang-amadeus-mozart_1.jpg• Erard piano: http://www.periodpiano.com/grand/images/Parquetry-Erard-lid-open.jpg• Teletype (1945): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:WACsOperateTeletype.jpg• Apple (1975): http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/27/Apple_I.jpg• Apple II (1977): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Apple-II.jpg• Gopher Servers Menu: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Floodgap_gopher_servers_menu.PNG• arpa: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Darpaheadquarters.jpg• Laeken Church: http://www.flickr.com/photos/nico78/152678493/• Yahoo 1994: http://news.cnet.com/2300-1032_3-6072801-1.html?tag=mncol• Wayback machine archive• iGoogle - http://timir.files.wordpress.com/2007/12/igoogle.jpg• Rounded corners theme: http://wp-themes.com/wp-content/themes/ahimsa/screenshot.png• Young haydn: http://www.audiosparx.com/sa/zdbpath/composerpix/2662.jpg• Law site: http://www.bluehousegroup.com/images/bpf_03.jpg• Esterhazy Palace: http://www.flickr.com/photos/konrads/2402182899/in/set-72157604062384320/• Haydn’s Opera court: http://www.bbc.co.uk/composers/haydn/pictures/images/haydn_05.jpg• Card sorting: http://www.flickr.com/photos/dunk/152245036/• Audience Voting: http://www.davegorman.com/images/audiencevote.jpg• Haydn’s tomb: http://www.flickr.com/photos/indigotimbre/2544538697/
thank you