Tools for a Usable Web
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Quinn's Human Interface Subtleties 


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121 at 1.0   HCI  GUI 
Article:quinn.echidna.id.au/Quinn/WWW/HISubtleties/Index.html
Quinn's Human Interface Subtleties NoMetaDescription Human Interface Subtleties Welcome to version 2.1 of Quinn's Human Interface Subtleties page. Table of Contents This page documents the following human interface subtleties: Anarchie's Active Assistance Anarchie's Disk Space Warning Anarchie's Drag Scrolling Anarchie Killing Transfers Anarchie's Menu Feedback Apple Guide Coach Marks Busy Cursor Eudora's Send Again Eudora's Single Scroll Bar Finder Drag Highlighting FTPd's Mode Detection ...

 

Usable Web: What's New over the last 365 days 


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122 at 1.0   WebHCI  UsableWeb 
Collection:usableweb.com/new/?days=365
  What's New What has been added to Usable Web over the last 365 days. You must first meet the basics of Web usability. Tenth Intermational World Wide Web...

 

Wired 2.10: Sensor Deprived 


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123 at 1.0   HCI  Input 
Article:www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.10/negroponte.html
Aliens/UFOs Computer Games Computer Ref. Another way for computers to sense human presence is through computer vision - giving machines the ability to see. By sensing facial expressions, the computer could access a redundant, concurrent signal that enriches the spoken or written message.

 

gdhaan thesis 


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124 at 1.0   HCI  UserModeling 
Article:www.ipo.tue.nl/homepages/gdhaan/articles/thesis-gdh-1606.html
gdhaan thesis NoMetaDescriptionConnection Failure. UserModeling http://www.ipo.tue.nl/homepages/gdhaan/articles/thesis-gdh-1606.html

 

Low-Technology Prototyping 


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125 at 1.0   HCI   
Article:www.firelily.com/opinions/low-tech.html
In particular, the authors are indebted to Michael Muller, Danny Wildman, and Ellen White of Bellcore, for their design and presentation of the techniques described in this article. This is interface theater, a low technology tool for user interface evaluation. Low-technology prototyping is an emerging area in human- computer interface design.

 

BREAKING THE SOUND BARRIER: GUIDELINES FOR AUDITORY DISPLAY DESIGN 


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126 at 1.0      
www.research.att.com/conf/hfweb/proceedings/tannen/index.html
As richer visual web content is delivered, there are reduced desktop and attentional resources available for the display of background browser processes (e.g. data transfer rate). This approach is aimed at implementing global usability by stepping away from language specific alphanumeric data and culturally limited icons and sounds, towards more abstract, but still informative, display elements. Symmetry, which has been an effective cue in graphical configural displays, and may be ...

 

Dr. James E. Sheedy 


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127 at 1.0   HCI  Screens 
Article:www.drsheedy.com/healtheffects.html
Many individuals who work at a computer experience eye-related discomfort and/or visual problems. However, the unique characteristics and high visual demands of computer work make many individuals susceptible to the development of eye and vision-related symptoms. Uncorrected vision conditions, poor computer design and workplace ergonomics and a highly demanding visual task can all contribute to the development of visual symptoms and complaints.

 

2. Human-Computer Interaction 


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128 at 1.0   HCI   
HypertextNode:www.sims.berkeley.edu/~hearst/irbook/10/node3.html
As steps towards achieving these goals, Shneiderman lists principles for design of user interfaces. Those which are particularly important for information access include (slightly restated): provide informative feedback, permit easy reversal of actions, support an internal locus of control, reduce working memory load, and provide alternative interfaces for novice and expert users. This principle is especially important for information access interfaces.

 

Chapter 1: Goal-Directed Design 


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129 at 1.0   HCI   
Article:www.cooper.com/books/t_chapter1.html
" He entered an "R" into his navigation computer. Unfortunately, instead of "ROZO," the pilot selected "ROMEO," 132 miles to the northeast. Jane selected "Open" from the "File" menu, and the "Open" dialog box appeared.

 

Microsoft Usability Home Page 


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130 at 1.0   WebHCI   
Collection:www.microsoft.com/usability/webconf.htm
About the Conference Designing for the Web: Empirical Studies was the second conference in the Human Factors and the Web/HTML Conference series. Submissions reviewed by: Eric Grose Sandia National Labs, Chris Forsythe Sandia National Labs, Jakob Nielsen SunSoft, Michael Muller US WEST Advanced Technologies, Pawan Vora US WEST, Scott Isensee IBM Corporation, Robert Schumacher US WEST, Judy Cantor AT&T, Nahum Gershon Mitre, Ken Dye Microsoft Corporation, Mark Simpson Microsoft Corporation,...

 

Conference Proceedings: 3rd Conference on Web and Human Factors 


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131 at 1.0   WebHCI   
Collection:www.uswest.com/web-conference/proceedings/index.html
The papers presented at the 3rd Conference on Human Factors and the Web are listed below in an alphabetical order based on the last name of the authors. Mason-Fossum, B., Thakkar, U. University of Illinois Primary School Classroom and ChickScope: Studying the egg in the classroom and using the Internet Nation, D. A., Plaisant, C., Marchionini, G., and Komlodi, A. University of Maryland Visualizing websites using a hierarchical table of contents browser: WebTOC

 

STIM - MouseSite 


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132 at 1.0   WebBuzz   
HomePage:sloan.stanford.edu/MouseSite/
WELCOME to the MouseSite, a resource for exploring the history of human computer interaction beginning with the pioneering work of Douglas Engelbart and his colleagues at Stanford Research Institute in the 1960s. At the heart of this vision was the computer as an extension of human communication capabilities and resource for the augmentation of human intellect. By 1968 Engelbart and a group of young computer scientists and electrical engineers he assembled in the Augmentation Research Center ...

 

The Viridian Notes 


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133 at 1.0   Cyber   
Collection:www.thehub.com.au/~mitch/V-Notes/ViridianIndex.html
About this archive Keyword index [up to 00105] Viridian Note 00001 (summary)- Viridian Design Speech Viridian Note 00002 (summary)- Viridian List Mechanics Viridian Note 00003 (summary)- Viridian Design Principles Viridian Note 00004 (summary)- Historical Awareness Viridian Note 00005 (summary)- Viridian Aesthetics Viridian Note 00006 (summary)- Floods 1 Viridian Note 00007 (summary)- Floods 2 Viridian Note 00008 (summary)- The Science Press on Global Warming Viridian Note 00009 (summary)- ...

 

Research Projects 


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134 at 1.0   HCI   
Collection:wsupsy.psy.twsu.edu/hci/research.htm
Contact  Charles G. Halcomb or Michael Bernard with questions regarding this site. Reference herein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory, The Wichita State University, or any agency thereof. The views and opinions expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of  ...

 

Email Overload: Exploring Personal Information Management of Email 


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135 at 1.0   HCI   
Article:www.acm.org/sigchi/chi96/proceedings/papers/Whittaker/sw_txt.htm
We demonstrate that email overload creates problems for personal information management: users often have cluttered inboxes containing hundreds of messages, including outstanding tasks, partially read documents and conversational threads. Furthermore, user attempts to rationalise their inboxes by filing are often unsuccessful, with the consequence that important messages get overlooked, or "lost" in archives. Email, information overload, personal information management, ...

 

international-usability@eGroups.com 


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136 at 1.0   HCI   
Discussion:www.egroups.com/group/international-usability/info.html
 Group Description: This forum is for Web Usability consultants who would like to share documents of "best practices", guidelines, and methods that are used to review, evaluate, and test Web sites for international use.  No postings are waiting to be approved.  Only members can post...

 

David W. Aha: CBR Resources 


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137 at 1.0      
www.aic.nrl.navy.mil/~aha/research/case-based-reasoning.html
Developing Industrial Case-Based Reasoning Applications: The INRECA Methodology (Bergmann et al. 28 November 1997Susan Craw posted an ad for research fellows/assistants at Robert Gordon University. 22 July 1996: Francesco Ricci of IRST advertised for a research position involving ML and CBR.

 

Usability News - Summer/2000 


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138 at 1.0   HCI  Screens 
Article:wsupsy.psy.twsu.edu/surl/usabilitynews/2S/rsvp.htm
 Studies have found that manual scrolling tends to produce poorer comprehension and reading efficiency than automatic presentation methods for SSI (Chen & Chan, 1990). With automatic presentation of text, manual scrolling is not necessary and the reader views the text at pre-set speeds. The order of presentation of the text passages, the text presentation formats, and the text presentation speeds were counterbalanced across subjects.

 

Maltron Keyboards - RSI relief 


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139 at 1.0   HCI  Input 
Collection:www.maltron.com/papers.html
Click on each of the links below to view each paper or click on the icon to download the paper as a Microsoft Word 97 document Paper presented at the 19th Annual Congress of IMART, The Royal Society of Medicine, Wimpole St., London. 4th May 1994 Paper presented at: The Ninth Congress Of The International Ergonomics Associations,2-6 September 1985, Bournemouth, England (Paper F1/2 (p 457 of proceedings))

 

developerWorks : Web architecture : The user experience  


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140 at 1.0   HCI  GUI 
Article:www-4.ibm.com/software/developer/library/w-berry
In his first column for developers looking for insights into better application design, Dick Berry explains why look and feel is only the tip of the iceberg. Find out why starting with the user experience leads to better application design, whether for Web users or unplugged users. Developers sometimes ask which aspects of look and feel contribute most to the overall usability of an application or Web site.

 

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