The much-anticipated fourth edition of Designing the User Interface provides a comprehensive, authoritative introduction to the dynamic field of human-computer interaction (HCI). Students and professionals learn practical principles and guidelines needed to develop high quality interface designs—ones that users can understand, predict, and control. It covers theoretical foundations, and design processes such as expert reviews and usability testing. Numerous examples of direct manipulation, menu selection, and form fill-in give readers an understanding of excellence in design. Recent innovations in collaborative interfaces, online help, and information visualization receive special attention. A major change in this edition is the integration of the World Wide Web and mobile devices throughout the book. Chapters have examples from cell phones, consumer electronics, desktop displays, and Web interfaces.
American computer scientist, a Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Computer Science. Born in New York in 1947 Attended the Bronx High School of Science, and received a BS in Mathematics and Physics from the City College of New York in 1968
In 2002 his book Leonardo's Laptop: Human Needs and the New Computing Technologies was Winner of an IEEE-USA Award for Distinguished Contributions Furthering Public Understanding of the Profession.
This was required reading for my User Experience class, and I genuinely loved it. I'm a self-taught programmer that thought I knew what I was doing. I had opinions on what worked and what didn't work, but it was all instinct and based on my own personal experience. After this, I've completely leveled up.
I despised this book, and probably made it through 2 chapters... perhaps it got better. I think I'm mainly bitter because it was so expensive ($100??) and the first chapter was 50 pages... mainly screenshots of things that everyone has seen, like the Google homepage, amazon.com website, the new york times... really?!? perhaps the authors were not aware, in 2005, that everyone has a computer connected to the Internet?
I could understand if this were like Jakob Nielsen's book that analyzes and annotates the web pages for design, style, content, navigation... but to waste so many full-color pages reproducing web pages (oh yeah, and I forgot to mention a screen shot of the Tony Hawk game?!!)... it's infuriating. Totally inappropriate for a graduate level class.
Amazon readers were not kind to this book, based on their reviews I would have never ordered it. However it is a required textbook for my class. I am not very far into it, but I can see that some of the complaints are valid. It was last published in 2005, which when measured in tech years, is ancient.
The premise is how to design HCI's (human computer interactions) I will have to read further before I can comment.
I will check back at the end of the semester for my final review.
This book is as dull as can be. The information is great and there were even a couple of chapters that were interesting in and of themselves but there must be better ways to present HCI information, which is a fascinating topic, than this one does.
Textbook for a Human Computer Interface course in my masters program. A bit of a dry read, but solid information, particularly on usability testing and topics like error message design.