Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Way back in 2004 Daring Fireball’s John Gruber posted a long but very interesting rant about why open-source GNU/Linux software is hard to use.

The article itself was a response to a misguided, condescending post from a Linux alpha geek about how he couldn’t figure out printer-sharing on a networked Linux box. The geek’s take was that the software should be made “easy enough for Aunt Tillie,” and implied that UI design in the open-source world was close to achieving this.

Gruber rightly pointed out that the open-source developer ranks were nowhere near to achieving that level of usability in their software, and would never achieve it as long as they treated UI design as an afterthought.

A somewhat long, but worthwhile read.

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Webword blogged the UPA 2005 Salary Survey, put out recently by the Usability Professionals’ Association.

Since I was the author of the salary survey report, I probably should’ve blogged it first. Better late than never.

Some highlights:

  • UPA received 1,329 responses. (Nice n…)
  • Expert review and usability testing were the most utilized techniques.
  • Eye-tracking and accessibility testing were the least utilized.
  • The overall average salary (in US dollars) was $78,445.
  • The average salary for males was $82,882; for females, $74,316.

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