Re: Creating Personas to Enhance GNOME's UX
- From: Allan Caeg <allancaeg ubuntu com>
- To: Kirk Bridger <kbridger shaw ca>
- Cc: Gnome Usability <usability gnome org>, Allan <allanpday gmail com>, gnome-asia-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: Creating Personas to Enhance GNOME's UX
- Date: Mon, 1 Nov 2010 20:49:54 +0800
Awesome. Thanks Kirk!
On Mon, Nov 1, 2010 at 2:36 PM, Kirk Bridger
<kbridger shaw ca> wrote:
If we're creating generic Gnome personas, how will they be used?
Are we looking for a tool that helps us publicize and market Gnome?
If they're intended to capture end user behaviour and needs - which
Gnome project will be using them? If we create them and nobody uses
them, is that OK? If someone uses them, we really should make sure
they're as useful as possible to those people. If we make them too
generic then they will simply be ignored as being unhelpful and
unspecific.
Good questions. Haven't thought of those. To answer these, I think we need feedback from different members of the GNOME community. Let's figure out how we can arrive at a consensus.
We can consider the existing personas that have been drafted/created
in various Gnome projects [1, 2, 3, 4] and ask how we can improve
upon them (or even use them). Or look at some existing user
observations [5] and ask how they were used, and how to use them
more.
I wasn't aware about most of those projects. Perhaps, we should get in touch with the people behind them. They'll probably be interested.
In this case it looks like there is a desire to better understand
the general Gnome user population. I'd suggest trying to focus the
personas on a market approach, rather than a software tool approach,
as it seems like they'll most likely be used as marketing tools. Or
perhaps take this opportunity to collect data on users and present
it in a data-rich way, rather than as stereotypical users.
Sorry I didn't understand what you meant here. Can you expound?
If we're able to do a large dump of user data I'd love to look at
some ideas I was throwing around back in the early days of Gnome
Shell [6] - taking a look at existing Gnome desktops, how they're
configured, and how they're modified from the default setup There's
a link on that page to a presentation done at MIX09 by Microsoft [7]
on how they gathered data to retool the Windows taskbar for Windows
7. I think having this kind of data would be greatly valuable for
designers and usability analysts alike in trying to figure out how
to improve the user's experience.
Sure. This is a great opportunity for us :)
Although on second thought the panels all go away with the next
version of Gnome, so this might require more thought in terms of
what exactly we want to gather data on.
Good point. We should make sure that we'll gather data that's relevant to GNOME Shell and not just to the existing GNOME desktop setup.
Kirk
[1] Banter personas:
http://live.gnome.org/Banter/Design/Personas
[2] Orca personas:
http://live.gnome.org/Orca/Specification/Personas
[3] Gnome web personas:
http://live.gnome.org/GnomeWeb/WebPersonas
[4] UTS personas:
http://live.gnome.org/UTSPersonas
[5] GnomeShell user observations:
http://live.gnome.org/GnomeShell/UserObservationData
[6] Gnome Shell user analysis ideas:
http://live.gnome.org/GnomeShell/UserResearch
[7] Windows 7 user investigation video:
http://videos.visitmix.com/MIX09/C26F (Silverlight required of
course (boo!))
On 10/30/2010 09:29 PM, Allan Caeg wrote:
I'll add some more things to ask based on what I
learned from my profession.
Let's also ask them what they do when they're not using the
computer, what the usual scenarios in their lives are (being at
work, playing with their kids, ), types of computers where they
use GNOME (netbook, desktop, etc), what distro they use, and why
they use GNOME.
These would help us characterize their mental models and how
they experience GNOME.
Comments?
On Sun, Oct 31, 2010 at 12:19 PM, Allan
Caeg
<allancaeg ubuntu com>
wrote:
Hello,
Defining personas is very important for User-Centered
Design. In fact, it should be one of the first activities
needed to build a system with good UX, based on JJG's
Elements of User Experience. We need to know who we're
designing for before we design, right?
There's an ongoing effort for this, but it's not
gaining much traction. Fortunately, GNOME.Asia is
interested in helping out by doing research in Asia. I
hope you can help us do research in other areas. We also
found this GNOME Marketing
User Survey effort. We can build on
this existing work if it's fit.
Let's start by surveying GNOME users about their
demographics, computing habits, what they use GNOME for,
and how much they use GNOME. Would that do? If so, let's
draft the questionnaire :)
--
Regards,
Allan
http://www.google.com/profiles/allancaeg#about
+63 918 948 2520
--
Regards,
Allan
http://www.google.com/profiles/allancaeg#about
+63 918 948 2520
--
Regards,
Allan
http://www.google.com/profiles/allancaeg#about+63 918 948 2520
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