Re: On breaking the woohoo barrier...thoughts on how GNOME can get great
- From: Jeff Waugh <jdub perkypants org>
- To: desktop-devel-list gnome org
- Cc: marketing list <marketing-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: On breaking the woohoo barrier...thoughts on how GNOME can get great
- Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2006 08:58:50 +1000
<quote who="Iain *">
> Kathy's talk on passionate users, Apple's "Mac vs PC" adverts and their
> success with making things cool have shown us that people don't care about
> what a computer can do, but what they can do with a computer (there may be
> more of a difference in my mind, I'm just lacking a good way of explaining
> it). The whole idea that "Here's some cool stuff you can do" rather than
> "this computer can do these 1000 features."
This is the distinction between "features" and "benefits". Apple have always
been good about communicating *benefits* first, features second. I feel that
Microsoft have traditionally done it backwards.
I have been banging on this drum in the Ubuntu community for a while, but I
guess I haven't been banging it sufficiently loud in GNOME: Whenever we talk
about GNOME, we *must* talk first and foremost about benefits, and then back
it up with the features.
> I guess first we need to know who we're targetting. I get a sneaking
> suspicion looking at the apple mac vs pc ads that they realised halfway
> through that they were maybe portraying the mac as too much of a fun
> computer and the PC was the work machine.
(Interesting side note - no idea what their focus group responses were for
these ads, but they've had a pretty distinct negative impression all over
the place. People tend to identify with comedian John Hodgman's dorky guy,
rather than Justin Long's smartarse, 'elitist', slacker.)
> I don't really know what we need to satisfy this mythical user, but some
> of the things my non-computery friends use computers for would be photo
> management and instant messenger.
Linux Australia had a booth at an education expo trade show here in .au, to
talk about FLOSS, share ideas, and get in the heads of education people. I
gave the GNOME pitch to a group of high school girls (who wanted "the cute
penguin stickers"), and figured instant messaging would be a good thing to
show off. I asked if they used IM ("yeah! duh!") and if they were on lots of
IM networks ("yeah, you have to be")... Then I showed them my Gaim buddies,
showing Jabber, MSN, AIM, ICQ. They all wanted it, so I gave them the Ubuntu
CD pack (which includes Windows software on the LiveCD). One of the girls
said, "Well, if Linux has amazing stuff like this that I didn't know about,
then I just want to run Linux."
*And she still does.*
> I'm sure I've forgotten something, and this probably turned into a stream
> of thoughts rather than anything coherent. Oh well
You're not alone - these are very important thoughts that are plaguing many
minds in the GNOME world and are a direct outgrowth from our massive refocus
on usability, benefits > features, making users kick arse, and 'universal
access'. This change in thinking - our collective passion for changing the
way we (and others) think about the FLOSS user experience - is making waves.
People are always asking me why Ubuntu has been so successful so quickly...
The 'Zen of GNOME', and GNOME itself, is a very big piece of that success.
- Jeff
--
linux.conf.au 2007: Sydney, Australia http://lca2007.linux.org.au/
"A problem worthy of attack, proves its worth by fighting back." - Paul
Erdos
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