The Computer User's Bill of Rights
A colleague and graduate school friend of mine of at IBM, Dr.
Claire-Marie Karat, penned this class computer user's manifesto
back in 1998. Unfortunately, the same concepts brought forward then
still need to be addressed now.
I offer this here for your reading as a reminder that we have been
fighting poor software design for many years and the fight for usability
still continues!
For more information, view the Business
Week article
|
-
The user is always right. If there is a problem with the use
of the system, the system is the problem, not the user.
-
The user has the right to easily install software and hardware
systems.
-
The user has the right to a system that performs exactly as
promised.
-
The user has the right to easy-to-use instructions for understanding
and utilizing a system to achieve desired goals.
-
The user has the right to be in control of the system and
to be able to get the system to respond to a request for attention.
-
The user has the right to a system that provides clear, understandable,
and accurate information regarding the task it is performing
and the progress toward completion.
-
The user has the right to be clearly informed about all system
requirements for successfully using software or hardware.
-
The user has the right to know the limits of the system's capabilities.
-
The user has the right to communicate with the technology provider
and receive a thoughtful and helpful response when raising concerns.
-
The user should be the master of software and hardware technology,
not vice-versa. Products should be natural and intuitive to
use.
Clare-Marie Karat, Ph.D., Psychologist
IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center
Hawthorne, N.Y. |
| |