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Entries in Bad examples (24)

Apple Wins, Samsung Loses 2007 User>Driven Hall of Fame and Shame

Well, the votes are in and, unlike in the Democratic primaries, the winners and losers are clear from the voting. Thanks to everyone who nominated their most and least favorite products and services of 2007 and to everyone who voted on those nominations, either publicly via comments or privately via email.

Apple Wins the 2007 User>Driven Hall of Fame

With multiple nominations for Leopard, the iPhone, the iPod Touch and AppleTV, Apple had the critical mass to lift them head and shoulders among others. Yes, Apple is a company and not a product or a service, but the consistency of nominations and votes for their products and services prompted me to award them the title collectively.

"This is easy. The best product is Apples' Leopard OS. The worst is Vista. I would have said the iPhone is the best, but the opportunity to compare / contrast Apple and MS for each of their OS releases was too compelling."

"iPhone anyone??"

"I'd have to second (or maybe third) the iPhone as best. If this is truly a competition of design then it wins hands down. The small technical and pricing issues with it don't come anywhere close to outweighing the elegance of the UI and user experience. That said, I'm waiting (seemingly forever) for the 3G version :)"

"ON THE POSITIVE side, I'm going to nominate the iPod Touch, especially in light of the software upgrade announced on Tuesday. As soon as Some Bright Mind figures out how to rig an audio in microphone and get VOIP working on it, it will become my must-have device."

"I'm going to go ahead and cast my ballot for Leopard. I'm really most intrigued by its contrast with Vista, the way it shows off what an OS can do if it's not hobbled by coming from Microsoft."

HONORABLE MENTION goes to the Blueline Power Cost Monitor for the greenest product nominated. I used this at home and with what I learned I was able to reduce my electricity usage by about 25% on a sustainable basis. By translating usage into dollars in real time, it quickly helps you learn what sucks the money out of your wallet and look for ways to save.

Samsung u540 V CAST Music Phone Wins 2007 User>Driven Hall of Shame

There was enough complaining about this one particular low-cost music phone from Samsung that it had to be the winner overall. (It was nominated twice in the first two responses to the contest announcement.)

"Every time I pick it up I accidentally engage two or three different buttons. Most times, my fumbling gets me to one step short of snapping a photo. And if you are not careful, it will snap shut on you while you are trying to open it to answer the phone"

"Worst product is my wife's Samsung cell phone."

"I keep my votes to the...Samsung phone (worst), as it has only proved itself worse every day."

DISHONORABLE MENTION goes to iTunes movie rentals for their 24-hour policy. Renting movies right from your TV or your Mac and moving them easily between devices seems like a dream come true - unless you are one of those people who have a hard time finding two hours at a stretch to watch an entire movie (and who doesn't?). Pause your movie until tomorrow then try to pick it up again on a different device and poof! It's gone.

Nomination Awards 

As promised, User>Driven t-shirts go out to those who nominated the winners. Glen was the first to mention Apple in his post about Leopard vs. Vista. Gina (my sister - full disclosure) jumped in early with the Samsung u540. Congratulations and thanks for playing our game!

Posted on Tuesday, February 19, 2008 at 10:55AM by Registered CommenterBruce McCarthy in , , , | Comments1 Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Vote for the 2007 User>Driven Hall of Fame and Shame

Thank you to everyone who wrote in nominations for the 2007 User>Driven Hall of Fame and Shame. We have 14 nominations for the Hall of Fame and 7 for the Hall of Shame. Post your votes below as comments by Saturday, February 9th. The votes will be counted and winners declared on the 10th. The original nominators of the winning products or services will receive User>Driven t-shirts from Zazzle.com!

Nominees for the 2007 Hall of Fame

Nominees for the 2007 Hall of Shame

Some of you may have noticed a few additions in the above lists. I've added my own nominations to both lists, things that impressed me (favorably or un-) in 2007.

I've nominated AppleTV for the Hall of Fame because it's worked so well for me as a music, video and photo server. It really has been a set-it-and-forget-it device for me from day 1. I wrote a blog entry on it back in March '07. I liked it then and I like it all the more as Apple has added new features. In particular, I was pleased when Apple announced movies (and TV shows, I hope eventually) for rent instead of for purchase through iTunes and directly through AppleTV. In my original comments I suggested that Apple should allow me to download content directly from the device instead of always requiring me to go to my Mac and use iTunes and then sync. They've listened to customers like me and gone and done that via a software upgrade. (Steve Jobs even mentioned customer feedback on this feature in his MacWorld 2008 keynote speech.) That's user-driven!

A feature of this same new service pushed me to add iTunes movie rentals to the Hall of Shame nominees, though. I approve of renting these kinds of bits, but the time limits on rentals make no sense to me. Rentals last up to 30 days from the time of download and 24 hours from the time you begin watching. I think a simpler model would be to allow you to watch it all the way through 1-3 times. This would prompt people to buy and download content that they mean to watch someday without worrying about it expiring before they get around to it. I think people will become reluctant to sign up for season passes to TV shows, for example, unless they religiously watch the shows as they arrive. The 30-day restriction bothers me less, though, than the 24-hour one. I personally have a trouble watching a 2-hour movie in one sitting. I have kids and it's hard for my wife and I to sit down to watch something until late in the evening, by which time we usually only have an hour or so before we have to go to bed. We have a good thing going now with Netflix where we can watch half of a movie, find a good place to pause, and pick the other half up the next evening. The Apple rental model, though, would cause the movie to expire just as we were sitting down to watch it on day 2. With the 30-day restriction in place, I just can't fathom the purpose of the 24-hour window. As far as I can see, it accomplishes nothing but keeping me away. This is a common restriction (Comcast OnDemand works the same way), but I had hoped for a more thoughtful approach from Apple.

I've also nominated the 2008 Honda Accord's new sheet metal for the Hall of Shame. This is a popular car that's been accused of blandness for many years, and I am assuming that Honda decided they needed to liven up the design a bit as they did with the smaller Civic. I personally find the new design simply ugly, however. They've taken an elegant and simple design and made it look bulky and complicated. It looks sporty from a few specific angles, but from most it looks quite awkward. The design is similar to, though edgier than, the new Toyota Camry with similar squared-off lower bodywork meant, I assume, to look like the custom bodywork you see on tuner cars. Given these cars are usually sold to more mature folks, though, this seems an like odd design direction. Maybe I'm just getting old. There are also design cues in the high beltline and overall bulk from the very successful Chrysler 300, and in the deep crease along the Honda's flanks and the bulbous rear on both cars that seem lifted directly from Chris Bangle's work at BMW - neither of which have impressed me.

See the reader comments at the bottom of the 2007 Hall of Fame and Shame announcement for background on why each of the other nominees should be considered. Post your votes as comments below by this Saturday and we'll soon find out what products and services you think were the best- and worst-designed in 2007. Thanks!

Posted on Sunday, February 3, 2008 at 08:39PM by Registered CommenterBruce McCarthy in , , , | Comments6 Comments | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Announcing the 2007 User>Driven Hall of Fame and Shame

Well, it's that time of the year again and time for the second annual User>Driven Hall of Fame and Shame.

Last year, if you can still cast your mind back that far, a number of products and services were nominated by readers, but in the end, Netflix won the Hall of Fame award for their innovative CD-by-mail service and continuous improvement program for their online user interface.

The Comcast HD DVR won the Hall of Shame award for "frequent crashes, unresponsive remotes, poor navigation and searching, and the lack of basic features found on competing DVRs that have been on the market for many years."

Like last year, I'd like to invite readers to submit nominations for products or services that they thing are incredibly well or incredibly poorly designed. Last year's instructions, slightly updated:

Take 10 seconds right now and think of the one thing (product, service, website, software, gadget, whatever) that really works for you, that's so elegant in its design and operation it must be the result of a good feedback loop between the product designers and its intended users. Write down your first thought in reply to this entry.

Then take 10 more seconds and think of the one thing (same list) that really irks you every time you have to use it because the product designer clearly did not take the time to think about how it would really be used or try it out on one real-life person before getting it to market. Write that down too and hit reply.

Even if your favorite product or service isn't new for 2007, if you used it or became aware of it this year, put it down.

Last year I nominated a few items but this year it's all up to you. Just click the little comments link below to add a comment telling everyone why your most and least favorites are deserving of praise and/or scorn. Let's hear it!

Posted on Sunday, January 13, 2008 at 09:10PM by Registered CommenterBruce McCarthy in , , , | Comments14 Comments | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Chinese Manufacturers Read Requirements Docs

According to Mattel and the NYT, the flap over recalled Chinese-made toys was actually a failure of design on Mattel's part. Bob Corrigan at ack/nak brings it back to the product manager's requirements. He says, in part:

Let's go over the Mattel designs - the product requirements - and see where it says "the system shall not employ toxic materials for any coating or other user-accessible interface where those toxic materials are present at a level known to present a health risk to the user as defined by the following US Government safety specifications."

And we all thought no one ever reads our requirements documents. I can't give the Chinese a pass for using lead and kerosene in toys they knew were meant for children, but here is a very graphic argument for thorough documentation - especially when outsourcing work.

Ever filed a bug for some obvious flaw and had the developer come back and say "works as spec'd?" You think it's obvious the product shouldn't work like that but you go back and find you never actually specified whether it should or shouldn't. 

Posted on Monday, October 1, 2007 at 12:40PM by Registered CommenterBruce McCarthy in , | Comments3 Comments | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Foleo Was a Bad Idea from the Start

Late yesterday on the Official Palm Blog, Ed Colligan, CEO of Palm, announced the last-minute cancellation of the Palm Foleo. I was surprised the device failed before it was even released, but I was not surprised it failed. It was a flawed, product-driven concept from the beginning.

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The Palm Foleo was limited and dependent on a separate phone
The approximately $500 "companion device" was designed like a lightweight notebook PC but was intended to be simpler and easier to use. It was designed to work with your Palm Treo via Bluetooth. The Treo would provide the connectivity to the network and the Foleo would provide a full size keyboard and a 10-inch screen.

Palm made much of its instant-on operating system and other differences from a traditional laptop, but the truth is that most of those differences added up to limitations and incompatibilities with few compensating advantages. Instant on is nice, but for $500 you can get a bare bones Windows laptop that will run Firefox and IE (the Palm browser is reportedly not compatible with many websites), handle multimedia files (there is no version of Flash, Adobe Acrobat or other popular media formats), and handle office documents (same issue). A Windows laptop could also take a wireless modem or connect to your phone via Bluetooth, thus duplicating the coolness factor of a device paired with your handheld.

Laptops do have limitations, it's true. Many are heavier than you'd like (though not all). They take a while to boot up (though not long if you put them on standby instead of shutting down every time). But most of the salespeople, corporate execs and gadget freaks who might be the target market for a companion device like this already have a laptop -- and are they really going to carry two devices or leave their laptop at home when they still can't open a Word doc?

I think the killer app was supposed to be email. You can use the larger screen and keyboard to advantage when dealing with email in a way that the thumb keypads on smartphones don't allow. The thing is, without support for the attachments that come in your email and a standard browser for following links, you still can't really get through all your email. More to the point, though, even if you could, I don't know why I wouldn't just want a Windows or MacOS notebook. Palm would essentially be trying to market an alternate operating system (alternative even to the Palm OS) and never be able to close the feature gap entirely with its more established competitors.

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The HTC Advantage is also compact but much more capable
A more interesting device in this space is the HTC Advantage. This compact device is a fully functioning Windows Mobile device that includes the phone, thus providing voice and data connectivity without a separate device. You can really only use the phone functionality when you are using the laptop functionality as well due to the size of the device. (It requires a headset or the speakerphone.) But you could use leave your phone behind while walking around the office or somewhere you don't care to be reached and still be connected for data. Most importantly, though, Windows Mobile provides full compatibility with all of your favorite browsers, media types and Office apps. This more capable device I can see a busy executive taking to meetings or on short business trips in place of a bulkier laptop.

Ed Colligan of Palm clearly does not grasp this simple logic. In his blog entry, he chalks the cancellation up to the need for his company to focus on their next generation operating system and the smartphones it will run on. This is the right strategy, but he still doesn't see why the Foleo was a bad idea. He says:

Jeff Hawkins and I still believe that the market category defined by Foleo has enormous potential. When we do Foleo II it will be based on our new platform, and we think it will deliver on the promise of this new category.

This blindness to market reality suggests product-centric thinking. Ed has identified a real set of problems with many of today's laptops but he sees his smartphones as the center of things and is building product ideas around them. If he were user-driven, Palm's CEO might consider building a standalone device like HTC's or companion device with Windows Mobile.

Posted on Wednesday, September 5, 2007 at 08:23PM by Registered CommenterBruce McCarthy in | Comments4 Comments | EmailEmail | PrintPrint
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