The Design of Everyday Things | 
agrandir | Auteurs: Donald A. Norman, Don Norman Créateurs: Donald A. Norman, Don Norman Éditeur: Basic Books
Prix de liste: EUR 12,68 Acheter Neuf: EUR 6,96 Vous épargnez: EUR 5,72 (45%)
Neuf (19) D'occasion (4) de EUR 6,96
Évaluation moyenne des clients: 4 commentaires Classement parmi les ventes: 4058
Média: Broche Édition: Reprint Pages: 272 Poids (kg): 0.7 Dimension (cm): 8.1 x 5.4 x 0.9
ISBN: 0465067107 Code Décimal Dewey: 620.82 EAN: 9780465067107 ASIN: 0465067107
Date de publication: Août 29, 2002 Disponibilité: Expedition sous 1 a 2 jours ouvres Condition: Neuf - En parfait etat. S'il vous plait, patientez 4-14 jours ouvres pour la livraison - Remboursement garantie - Plus d'un million de clients servis et satisfaits - Assistance a la clientele en Francais.
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Amazon.com With the many recent advances in technology, it seems, there has followed a diminution of quality. Electronic books have several advantages over their print counterparts, for instance. But for the time being, they're hard to use and unattractive to boot. Computers, which are supposed to make our lives easier, are commonly sources of frustration and wasted time. Movies are wondrously chock-a-block with special effects--but someone forgot the story. And so on. Donald Norman, a retired professor of cognitive science, is bothered to no end by the fact that grappling with unfriendly objects now takes up so many of our hours. Over the course of several books, of which The Psychology of Everyday Things was the first, he has railed against bad design. He scrutinizes a range of artifacts that are supposed to make our daily living a little easier, and he finds most of them wanting. Why, he asks, does a door need instructions that say "push" or "pull"? A well-designed object, he argues, is self-explanatory. But well-designed objects are increasingly rare, for the present culture places a higher value on aesthetics than utility, even with such items as cordless screwdrivers, dresser drawers, and kitchen cabinets. In their concern for creating "art," many designers don't seem to consider what people actually do with things. Such disregard, Norman suggests, leads to few objects being standardized: think of all the different kinds of unsynchronized clocks that lurk in microwave ovens, VCRs, coffee makers, and the like--and of all the different kinds of batteries needed to drive them. Why, he wonders, must we reset all those clocks whenever the power goes off? Some designer somewhere, he ventures, ought to develop a master clock that communicates with all other electric clocks in a home--one that, when reset, synchronizes its slave units. You don't need to be especially interested in technological matters to enjoy Norman's arguments. The book's underlying question is aimed at a global audience: will the design of everyday things improve? If this entertaining and, yes, well-designed book changes even a few minds, perhaps it will. --Gregory McNamee
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Nice Argument for Usability, But Misses the Application Peuvent 26, 2007 A.Trendl HungarianBookstore.com (Glen Ellyn, IL USA) 2 sur 2 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile
"The Design of Everyday Things" by Donald A. Norman is said to be one of those great usability books. I bought mine at a major usability conference, believing the hype. My conclusion: Useful, but overhyped. Norman takes a theme that says, "Look at history and you will see how the objects we use daily are sensible and functional. Now, design websites and software likewise," and develops a complete book. Rats. I gave it all away. Now you do not need to buy the book, nor read any its 257 pages. Really, that's more or less all there is to the book. It is easy to read, but, in the end, becomes repetitive and is deficient in assisting the reader with application. It points out a problem we need to understand, but offers no solution. It is worth reading, but lacks as an instructional tool. For the dense-headed, or for someone who has never considered the arguments for thinking about function before form, the book is tremendously useful. Example after example is presented is simple terms so that readers will see that merely having a cool website is not enough. Where the book does not meet the mark is in the transferring the ideas into something modern, practical, and, in the case of we communications people, websites. What starts with a brilliant exposition about devices being useful ends where it started. Anthony Trendl editor, HungarianBookstore.com
Une tres bonne introduction a l'ergonomie Septembre 25, 2003 Regis Medina (Paris, France) 2 sur 2 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile
Dans ce grand classique, Norman s'interesse a l'ergonomie des objets de tous les jours - avec une attirance marquee pour les poignees de porte ! Sur un ton assez desinvolte, il fait le tour des principaux enjeux et concepts de l'ergonomie des interfaces homme-machine : modeles conceptuels, "affordances", gestion des erreurs, etc. Un tres bon point de depart pour decouvrir le domaine de l'ergonomie.
Every engineer should read it ! Décembre 10, 2001 5 sur 5 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile
Every engineer, designer, or student in engineering should read this book, whatever his/her field ! Surely if more designers had read this book, we would have appliances or machines that would be more usable. The book is a lot of fun to read, and you will never say "I'm stupid" when failing to use a machine anymore. Instead, you will say "who in the world is the stupid person who designed this machine so badly !". It will change your life.
pour prendre du recul Octobre 10, 2001 Dominique Causse (Daylight, France) 3 sur 4 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile
Ce livre presente une approche originale de l'ergonomie ; Tres pedagogique et parfois tres drole. Mais aussi un livre tres solide dans ce qu'il avance - passionnant. A lire pour le plaisir et pour prendre du recul. C'est l'un de mes preferes !
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