Narendra Rocherolle

Alexis Rocherolle


Archive for the 'Design' Category

Secret to the iPhone Keyboard – Heavy Fingers

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008 at 9:41 AM  |  View Timeline

I’ve had an iphone for about 9 months now and it is hands down the sleekest and most useful device I have ever owned.  I am yet to pick up the 3g model for two reasons: first, it has a plastic casing that improves reception but isn’t nearly as nice as the original; second, I am fearful of the battery life that has been diminished with 3g.

One of the early review gripes about the iphone was the virtual keyboard and I must confess that when I first picked up the device I started laughing as I watched my thumbs (which appeared to have grown in girth instantly) shaking as I contemplated trying to strike individual keys on the screen.

It didn’t take long for me to learn how to type blazing fast on the iphone and I remember my epiphany distinctly.  There is a hidden feature that lets you press and then drag on the keyboard.  For instance if you tap the .?123 key and hold it down you can drag your finger across the screen to a key (say an exclamation point) and then release.  You will have just typed an exclamation point and the keyboard goes back to the original view.

The same concept works with plain old typing.  I call it “heavy fingers” (perhaps “heavy thumbs” is more appropriate).  The idea is that when you push down with a slightly heavier rhythm you can be certain of the key and also slide to adjust a mistake.  Of course, whatever you end up missing 99% of the time the iphone will correct anyway.

Give it a try.  It is a paradox but you’ll soon find heavy translates to speed.  If only that worked in my ultramarathoning

Analog Lessons in Usability: Car Locks

Sunday, November 19th, 2006 at 1:54 PM  |  View Timeline

[also cross-posted at 30B]

Part two of dispensing unsolicited advice is our new usability column called Analog Lessons. Here’s the skinny, there’s lots of real world examples of design and usability that make for great discussions about how to and how not to implement things online!

Our first example deals with all those new fangled car keys that help you lock and unlock your car (among other things). Who hasn’t remotely popped the trunk of a rental car in a crowded parking lot to help your vehicle identify itself!

One of our big pet peeves is car locks that give audible feedback. Well, specifically those that use the car HORN to acknowledge that yes, “I JUST LOCKED THE CAR FOR YOU!” We imagine that some engineer somewhere had a good reason for the implementation and that there is most likely some arcane combination that prevents it in case you are one of those conscientious people who doesn’t want to irritate the crap out of everyone else in your vicinity or wake a sleeping family member.

So, how do we translate this into sound website design and application development?

It’s a lesson that has been around since the web got graphical and browsers started enabling sound. Simply put: no unwanted or unsolicited noise!

Sure it flies in the face of MySpace, but some surprisingly polished sights like espn.com and MLB team sites are guilty of launching blaring video clips. It is no secret that people use the web at work so respect your user and respect your user’s environment. The only exemption to this rule we are willing to allow is the new crop of video blogs where the focus is 100% video (e.g. Rocketboom).

Have a great weekend.

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