Hello everyone,<br><br>I've been seeing a lot of solicited user comments on the new layout etc, but most of these comments are either polarized or not very helpful in coming up with the best solution to a problem. I don't know if you guys remember but I sent out an email a few months ago detailing my plans for gathering concrete evidence of pitfalls and design breakdowns as well as solutions. I sent out an email to Leinir but I'm not sure if he got it (hope you get this email, Leinir!). Here is an excerpt of what I wrote:
<br><br>--<br>"First of all, I would like to know how usability has been taken into
account in amaroK. I know there has been a lot of layout changes being
made, but how do you guys decide what is usable and what isn't? Do you
look for a common complaint from the users and try to fix it or rely on
expert advise? Or is there no set method of deciding what goes and what
doesn't?
<br><br>I've been seeing a lot of debate about how to release the new
layout changes (beta or wait for new release), and I must say that both
of them are not the best ideas. However, since I came late and those
two seem to be the choices that people are set on, I was hoping to work
focus on after the new layout changes. The reason for this is,
controlled user testing of the proposed changes should be conducted
BEFORE unleashing it upon an unsuspecting user base. If you are going
to be relying on a lot of opinions of the users after they use it, you
will be getting a lot of unreliable data and noise and it will be
difficult to decide which complaints are valid and which aren't."<br>--<br><br clear="all">I also said that I've had interest from other people in forming a usability testing team here in San Diego, and I thought that other regional usability testing would be nice to find cultural differences (since culture is definitely a factor). For example, someone mentioned that the placement of the sidebar should be user controlled. Although there will probably be some small user base that would like it on the right, most left-to-right reading cultures will want it on the left, much like the logos on most webpages are best placed in the upper left.
<br><br>Sorry for the long email!<br><br>Summary: How is usability currently addressed in amaroK?<br><br>-- <br>-Kel