January 19, 2007 lecture by Harold Thimbleby for the Stanford University Human Computer Interaction Seminar (CS 547). This talk reviews simple usability and safety problems in interactive devices and how they can be detected either in design or by getting feedback from users.
CS 547 | Human-Computer Interaction Seminar:
http://hci.stanford.edu/seminar/
Stanford HCI Group:
http://hci.stanford.edu/
Stanford Center for Professional Development:
http://scpd.stanford.edu/
Stanford University Channel on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/stanforduniversity/
Yeah, safety is a major concern. This must always be the case.
thetricon69 2 months ago
anyone know how to fix the mouse acceleration in the mouse settings. I have it set to none but it doesn't register it stays at low speed but it still on none. I can see the different when i put it on none it feels the same as low. If anyone could help thanks btw i have a logitech mx518 mouse
starlogic99 2 years ago
Only 20 minutes of this lecture are about the issues indicated by the title - "simple" devices that are more complicated than anyone imagines. The rest of the lecture is a proposal about a format for impactful reporting of design problems, not a bad idea, but he could have followed his own advice and put across the essence of it in two minutes.
igbot123 3 years ago