Thursday, January 26, 2012

Steve Jobs Biography

For Christmas I received Steve Jobs biography. My family knows that I work in high tech and that I design user interfaces and applications and fell in love with my recent MacBook Pro, my first "Apple" product.

This is the first book that I've read cover to cover in quite a while. Most of my reading is technical articles, blogs, online books, etc. where I only have a few minutes to figure something out, learn a new technology or get an answer to a technical question.

As I went through the book, it became very nostalgic. I started my career in the early 80's at Digital...saw the first PC they made, saw a "color" screen appear and this thing called a mouse too. I look back now and feel so lucky that I was part of the user interface group, designing applications using DECWindows (and later Motif) and working with the User Interface lab, observing users and learning how someone interacts with a device. The whole interaction and experience is what has differentiated Apple from the beginning and was driven by Steve Jobs. Sure, they came up with great devices that did wonderful things and were so cool, but so did others, it was just that theirs were so elegant, simple and user friendly.

I look at the user interfaces I have designed and that I continue to design and I now have a more critical view of them. When a user lands on my screen, do they know what to do? Does it make sense? If they do the wrong thing, is it clear why that operation didn't work and what they should do instead? Do they need to read a manual to figure it out?

It is fascinating to me that since 1980 to now, 2012, UI design really hasn't changed at all. Buttons, menus, scrollbars, trees, tables, etc. are still the same. Just like an artist with a canvas and paint, it's the combination of colors, layout, textures that make his painting into art. Those who can take a complex set of data and a complex task and make into the most simple, logical, and easy operation end up with the most usable products.

I judge my applications by my users. How quickly are they doing productive work with it? Can I get them to the right screen with 1 click or 1 touch or 1 operation? Is my Product Manager out demoing and using the application without asking me anything about it? No one reads the manuals these days. The application has to "just work."

So today I work on user interfaces developed with GWT. I also design products for the Android interface. Any feature or layout or function I can imagine can be done with the GWT widget set. Any look or color or size or shape can be done with CSS. For Android, a smaller/touch screen presents a different set of challenges, but really forces me to think even simpler, more straightforward and work towards an elegant solution.

Steve Jobs was very demanding, knew what he wanted and would not be happy until he saw it and reading his biography has certainly left a mark on me. Steve thought something was total crap, horrible, unusable until one final tweak made it "perfect." So strive for quality - prototype - adjust - rework - open your eyes to the environment around you - and shape your work into something elegant. You are one tweak away from perfection.



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