1 Lecture 11: International and Handheld User Interfaces Brad Myers 05-863 / 08-763 / 46-863: Introduction to Human Computer Interaction for Technology.

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Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 11: International and Handheld User Interfaces Brad Myers / / : Introduction to Human Computer Interaction for Technology Executives Fall, 2012, Mini 2 © Brad Myers

Logistics Exam information: Fri, Dec. 14, 1 - 4pm in room 7500 Wean Hall Mon. Dec. 17, 2 – 5pm in Posner Hall 152 & 153 Anyone can go to either See: Guest lecture next Wednesday David Bishop, Maya Design Please attend! Final date for late homeworks: Wednesday, December 12, 2012 Today is evaluation day – please fill out questionnaires 2© Brad Myers

International User Interfaces 3© Brad Myers

4 International User Interfaces Note: These are in addition to all the previous recommendations / guidelines Used in more than one country Not just language translation English versions of products may be used all over the world Reviews of products may mention international usability issues © Brad Myers

5 Web Sites Accessed World-Wide Internationalization All web sites are globally accessible Providing multiple language versions Making the English version more accessible Less than 10% of Internet users in US (cite, slide 5)cite Internationalization One design that can be used world-wide Localization Different designs customized to different languages © Brad Myers

6 Icon International Design Issues Mailbox icons? No icons with fingers or feet or other gestures Light switches on or off? No visual puns Table of numbers as: (In Danish, use bord and tabel) No baseball metaphors Arbitrary icons are even harder Red cross for help © Brad Myers

7 Translation Issues Standard terms for “File”, “Edit”, etc. in each language There are probably hundreds of computer words What about “Viewport”, “Canvas”, “Front” Across the industry, and in a company’s other products Keep glossaries of words to be used Often need to know the rationale behind why names were chosen E.g. “Find” vs. “Find File” both translated to “Rechercher” in French © Brad Myers

8 Wording issues Character Sets Supporting extra characters, like ¿ Á ñ æ ç ß Å, and many accents: ć ĉ ċ č ö Asian alphabets Sort order? Avoid abbreviations and slang “MI” for middle initial “N/A” for not available or not applicable “Under the hood” for how something works “No cows on the ice” Ask for child’s age not school grade Holidays can be different Mother’s day, Thanksgiving, Independence Day can be at different times People’s names: “First” name, “Last” name Which is which? Also, sometimes, First+Last not very unique (12 “Kim”s, 2 “Min Kim”s) address usually globally unique Paper size issues for printing A4 vs. 8.5”x11” vs. ??? © Brad Myers

Number issues Paying in international currency Currency symbols: $1000 (US, Canada), vs. ¥1000 Weights and sizes and clothing sizes in metric and U.S. units Billion: thousand million or million million? Number formats: vs. 4,567 Ask if ambiguous (not “illegal number”) Time formats: 2:30 pm vs. 14:30; time zones: EDT Date formats: 10/11/12? use October 11, 2012 instead Europeans say “Week 25” Telephone number formats vs. (412) vs Allow +, (), -,. etc. Don’t use letters only: ASK-TOWER Locations: England is on both sides of 0° Longitude US software couldn’t deal with negative positions © Brad Myers 9

10 Localization Not just translating the interface Web sites may have different content e.g. German yahoo has “Lifestyle” on front tab, compared to US Yahoo “Jobs”German yahoo US Yahoo And different icons for sports: Different sizes of language may require redesign But automatic layout can help Indicate content that is not translated Bad example: “Radio KIT” on When there is a choice of language Don’t use flags to indicate language: US vs. Canada vs. England Use language’s own name for itself (ENGLISH, ESPAÑOL, ) Good place for pictures of text (if fonts aren’t loaded) First page in default language first so many won’t need extra click Make links for other languages easy to find (e.g., Not:

Dialog Box Layouts: Print 11© Brad Myers

Dialog Box Layouts: Fonts 12

Dialog Box Layouts: Paragraph 13© Brad Myers

14 Shipping Issues Shipping charges and options for overseas Sales taxes? Accept entry of non-US characters in fields May be an issue for sorting, etc. Consider have separate US and overseas shipping pages Otherwise: Use “zip / postal code” as prompt Different organization of postal address (postal code after city or after state?) In “state/province” field, Full-length state names Option for “other countries” in state field © Brad Myers

15 URL issues Use for English language version Use (.uk,.de,.kr) for foreign site Use local (country specific) URL also for sites of only local interest © Brad Myers

16 Implementation Issues Separate “resource files” Put strings, etc. in separate file so can be easily changed without recompiling Not as part of the code Including error messages, etc Difficult due to constructed messages  “Cannot copy file to directory due to ”  Even the order of the words may need to be different Also put in locations and sizes, since may change with the language OS features help Automatic formatting and input for dates, etc. Toolkit support for layout, conversions, Unicode, etc. “Locale” But does changing it convert values or just show them differently? OK for date, not for currency! © Brad Myers

Windows 7 “Region and Language” Formerly called “Locale” 17© Brad Myers

18 International User testing Localized interface can have new and different usability problems Not sufficient to test one version and then translate Should perform heuristic analysis by usability specialists familiar with target culture and language Should test with native speakers in different countries Use international or national usability consultants Use “remote testing” with instrumented web sites © Brad Myers

Handheld User Interfaces 19© Brad Myers

20 Why Important? Now: Handheld = Mobile = Cell Phone Old: PDA = Personal Digital Assistant Tablets: iPads, readers, Android’s Big numbers of mobile phones Over 6 billion mobile phones in use (Wikipedia) (Wikipedia) About 50.4% of phones in use in US are Smartphones (Nielsen) (Nielsen) 1.1B global Smartphone users; only 17% of subscribers (cite, slide 7)cite “Mobile phones are rapidly becoming the preferred means of personal communication, creating the world's largest consumer electronics industry.” More mobile devices purchased last year than PCs and cars combined! © Brad Myers

More Statistics 10% of all phones in US were iPhones in 2011 Android continues to take larger share of SmartPhones, currently 48.5% (iPhone 32%) About 150 million tablets in US (cite) – 29% of adultscite 21 Smartphone market share in US as of May, 2012 (Nielsen)Nielsen Tablet market share in US (Pew research)Pew research (cite, slide 12)cite

“Computers” © Brad Myers22 (cite, slide 24, 25)cite

23 mCommerce Importance Nielsen: “Mobile access will be the third ‘killer app’ for the Internet, after and web browsing” “Anyone, anytime, anywhere, connected” Mobile Devices are “Life Accessories” --Panu Korhonen, Usability Group Lead, Nokia Interact with mobile devices in a more “intimate” way than regular PCs © Brad Myers

Usage Model Different for Handhelds than PCs or Web Immediate requests Short interactions, frequently interrupted Public use Fashion statement Less business-oriented More value to design Little engagement Must always be able to answer the phone 24© Brad Myers

Design for Mobile First Consultants recommend web sites designed for mobile first: © Brad Myers25 slide 76

Focus on Navigation or Content? 26 slides 107-8

Issues with Handheld Designs Must follow the device’s style guidelines May depend on OS, Hardware and carrier Verizon, AT&T, Sprint …. May be different hardware configurations Not with Apple iPhone – closed platform RIM’s Storm How many buttons? Windows Mobile has minimum requirements Android? 27© Brad Myers

28 slide 198

Many screen sizes pdfhttp://static.lukew.com/mmdd_workshop_ pdf, slide 197

30 Design for Small Devices Principles from the Palm’s designers “Designing the Palm Pilot: A conversation with Rob Haitani”, by Eric Bergman and Rob Haitani, chapter 4 in Information Appliances and Beyond, Eric Bergman, ed. (2000) Fast access to key features on small screens -> Only a few commands used a lot Leave commands off main screen, even if not symmetric  new vs. delete  (think stapler and stapler remover) Note that violates consistency Tap and then type in schedule and to-do Only four buttons – which ones? Vs. Windows CE -> if know PC, this is familiar  But usage models are different  PC: infrequent long usage  Palm: frequent short bursts of usage © Brad Myers

31 Design for Small Devices, 2 Analogy: people like to eat in a car Palm design is like adding the cup holder Have a house with the other appliances (like the PC) They did lots of user testing with prototypes created using HyperCard Usage scenarios © Brad Myers

32 Studies for Original Windows CE “The Interaction Design of Microsoft Windows CE”, by Sarah Zuberec, chapter 5 in Information Appliances and Beyond, Eric Bergman, ed. (2000) Studies: minimum target: stylus = 5.04mm 2, finger = 9.04mm 2 Drag between down and up for “tap” = 2mm Many usage scenarios User tests identified Tahoma 10 bold as best system font, but couldn’t be used because not enough content fit in the dialogs So used Tahoma 9 Novice users did better with keyboard, but experts preferred character recognizer Problem with initial designs: too many taps Achieved “walk up and use” but too slow for experts Double tap with stylus difficult and unnatural “Consistency worked against learning and use.”