Showing posts with label nokia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nokia. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 06, 2012

Windows Phone 7 thoughts

I have had a change to briefly try out the Windows Phone 7 in real life use (i.e. with personal stuff fully set up in the phone).

The Metro style in Windows Phone 7, especially when coupled with the upcoming user interface of the Windows on desktop, is a pretty sleek package, promising to free normal users from the clutters and overall mess of the user interfaces in the old PC era.

Removing all that cruft of button gradients, background graphics and shadow effects also helps in making the Metro experience fast and responsive. Visual delight is focused on the few transitions and animations, used consistently across the whole platform.

Getting the basics right

On the apps side, there are some things that are really done well, which are particularly good news for people, who getting introduced to the touchscreen phones. Making phone calls, sending messages and calendar all work very nicely. In fact, of the dominant players (like iPhone and Android), I think the Windows Phone tackles the basic use the best, as it focuses on few key tiles as the shortcuts to the basic functionality of a phone. Using the multitude of apps is relegated to the second level.

Beyond the basic functionality, the social integration on the phone is done well, including the automatic merging of contacts for various services like Facebook and Twitter. The Messages app supports sending Facebook instant messages in addition to SMS. Messages to single person gets all merged in just one conversation. Pretty handy and simple.

Nokia's take on Windows Phone 7

The device tested was Nokia's Lumia 800. Perhaps as a parallel to Android skins, many have been expecting for Nokia to create its unique experience on top of Windows Phone 7. Instead of a skin, Nokia has so far focused on providing Nokia-only apps and content to its Lumia devices. Considering how difficult it has been for Android vendors to update their own skins in existing devices to latest Android OS (even a year or more since major OS version launch), I feel Nokia has chosen more agile, complementary and fruitful path to follow.

Nevertheless, there are possibilities to improve the Windows Phone experience with design heritage that Nokia has collected over time, particularly in Nokia N9. The Nokia N9 was the first Nokia phone to truly take advantage of gestures in the core navigation of the device, which was further emphasized in the physical form of the device. The form was eventually inherited by Lumia 800 as well, but not the gestures.

Without breaking the existing user interface, Windows phones could easily introduce gestures as shortcuts, like in N9, to go around the device. This is likely to happen anyway, considering Windows 8 on tablets and desktop already plan to rely heavily on gestures. Why not be able to go back to home screen(s) from an app by swiping down from the top, on a Windows phone? (1) Additionally, switching between apps by swiping from the side, would be nicely consistent with the upcoming desktop world.

Nokia could also introduce it's own take on the homescreen, while not creating it's own "skin". Of the three home screens, two would be almost the same as currently - the tiles view and the app launcher. The third home screen would be the task switcher view, like N9. Although the 3rd is somewhat optional. If the horizontal edge swipe would allow good access to recently used apps, then separate task switcher view is just unnecessarily duplicating that functionality. However, thanks to metro style, the "thumbnails" of the apps in task switcher view are much more identifiable and attractive than on "full chrome" UIs such as N9.

This home screen approach would allow removing the awkward and disjointed forward/backward arrows from the home views, which also have forced the tiles and the launcher list to be appallingly de-centered. Simple horizontal swipes would allow balanced aesthetics to the most used views of the device, as well as enabling to use the standard status bar across all views of the devices.


N9 Home screens (events, app grid, task switcher)


Windows Phone 7 with N9-like home screens (tiles, app launcher, task switcher)


Young platform

The Windows Phone 7 is a young platform still, it was launched just 1,5 years ago. As is expected, there are things that would benefit from the maturity that comes with age.

While Panorama is a very nice concept as a user interface template, it is currently almost the only choice available to designers. Hence, apps tend to look bit too much alike. Even more than that, panoramas emphasize showing snippets of previews in listings, while making direct access to the full listing of the content (beyond the top 5) a bit of a drill down effort. Some apps unfortunately have not been able to avoid this pitfall, like the MS Marketplace -app and Nokia's App Highlights.

When inside applications, one is often confused with multiple search buttons – one is a hardware key taking to Bing, other is residing on the app toolbar, doing app specific search. Just clean this and use only HW search key to do app specific search, m'kay?

Any app which is primarily a text content oriented app fits pretty nicely in the Metro style – the panoramas, big fonts and all. However, on the visually oriented side, the standard UI elements seem to just scratch the possibilities. Are there any really mind-blowing visual reading apps like Flipboard on iPhone/iPad? Haven't found any. iPhone has a good share of user interface innovation happening, going beyond the standard UI, like the Clear app. Windows Phone apps are currently taking the initial first baby steps.

The over-the-air updates do not seem to be able to handle all the updates that come to the device.

The Marketplace app showcases way too many undesirable apps in search results. Particularly the trinket-like apps and x-rated apps are very often appearing in places where they shouldn't. There are some really good and relevant apps in the marketplace, but currently they are somewhat hidden in trash. Also, the typical app price in Marketplace is 2€ or more, whereas same or equivalent app is 0.79€ on iPhone. Unnecessarily pricey, I'd say.

When device is fully set up with personal accounts, the battery life seems to be less than iPhone and N9, lasting just a day when on light usage. A pity considering Windows Phone is kind of supposed to be a simplification, design-wise, from those phones.



(1) No, it does not make sense to close or exit an app when swiping down. Device should handle multitasking (& closing of apps) automatically (like iPhone does). Apps should just hide themselves and users should be able to return to the state they were in last time they used the app, via application launcher or task switcher.

Sunday, July 03, 2011

Disrupting the market

So the Nokia N9 got finally launched, nearly 2 years after it's predecessor Nokia N900.

When N900 was show to the world, it demonstrated new ways to do full multitasking, integrated Skype and VOIP experience, a good solution to conversational SMS and instant messaging, online presence, integrated sharing, a very capable web browser... And a Unix terminal program installed by default on device. In a sea of smartphones of various degrees, it showed what a powerful mobile computer could be like. With a primarily landscape-oriented UI.

To this day, N900 is a device that is still referenced in blogs, when people talk about UI innovation, particularly when it comes to offering a full-scale multitasking experience. This is pretty remarkable especially considering that N900 has not received any mainstream-level adoption when it comes to the amount of devices sold. It's more of a "proof of concept" that leading-edge people can have as their own phone.

And now, the N9 takes the multitasking to the heart of the device, designing it so that it almost disappears. Compared to N900, the N9 is much more of a consumer product than any Maemo device before it, but its potential as a high-volume mainstream device is dampened by Elop's current Nokia strategy. But in fact, this means that the heritage of OSSO/Maemo/Meego continues - as a disruptive device to talk about. Again, it may not be the device that everyone owns, but it still will be a device that the blogs will reference to, when they talk about UI innovation. And that has an effect on how the other devices in the market will be designed.

These devices are the key for putting Nokia and "thought leadership" back together.

Friday, December 04, 2009

At Barcelona - UX meets Code

Presentacion de Jose Martinez
Let's see what all we can accomplish here. Blogging with MaStory :)

Monday, October 26, 2009

Maemo 5 GUI Design Template (GUI PSD)


The Maemo 5 documentation now includes also the GUI Design Template, which allows one to create high-fidelity image mockups.

Currently the GUI Design template is available in Photoshop format that has a fairly comprehensive library of assets – all fully editable.

As is usual with these things, this is not something you'd use e.g. for wireframes or as a replacement for pen an paper. This is more useful for situations where pixel perfectness is needed.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Designing UI for Maemo 5 (Maemo Summit 2009)

I had a presentation in Maemo Summit 2009 about Designing UI for Maemo 5. The slides of the presentation are available in slideshare.

Abstract:
How to make the applications work together as an integrated whole?

This talk will discuss the UI Design of the Maemo 5 product as an "application portfolio". Design patterns as well as application specific designs are presented, and the reasoning for the design decisions.

Design of the pre-installed applications in the Maemo 5 product is discussed, highlighting the UI flows, common user experience solutions and power user features. Throughout the application walk-through, the structure and "look and feel" of the applications is categorized, resulting in a conceptual design tool for 3rd party application designers and developers.

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

N900 - Sounds fun! (updated)

So there's this nice device called N900. And a cool user interface video:


The song in that video is GRUM - Go Back (Le Castle Vania Remix), an energetic tune, freely downloadable from the net.

Lastly, here's a less than 30 second excerpt of that song, so that you could, for example, enjoy it in your cellular phone :)

Update: You can get another, more official N900 ringtone and message alert tone from links on Nokia Europe pages.