| February 2003 | |
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By New Riders Publishing approx. $25 |
Wouldn't it be great if you didn't have to frequently contemplate your next action when using a Web site? If everything you saw just made complete sense? By teaching the basics of Web design in plain English, Don't Make Me Think! by Steve Krug seeks to all but eliminate those aspects of Web sites that confuse and frustrate most users. And Krug achieves this in a lighthearted and visually appealing manner. Perhaps best of all, because the book is a slim 195 pages, it's a book you can easily read in one or two evenings. Krug is no quack. He has more than 10 years of accumulated Web design and usability testing experience, honed through working for reputable companies like Apple, Netscape, AOL, BarnesandNoble.com, and Excite@Home. During his career he has watched dozens of users struggle to use these and other Web sites, which is undoubtedly the best way to learn what doesn't work on the Web. The book jacket describes Krug as a "little-known but highly respected usability consultant." He may have been relatively anonymous before, but, based on the buzz I've heard about him in the San Diego usability community alone, Mr. Krug is not destined to stay "little known" for long. Krug asserts that "there are no simple 'right' answers for most Web design questions (at least not for the important ones). What works is good, integrated design that fills a needcarefully thought out, well-executed and tested." This is Krug's overall philosophy as he covers the three parts of the book:
The text speaks plainly, not academically, which helps to draw readers into his dialogue and make his explanations understandable for readers with little or no previous Web design experience. In Chapters 6, what I consider to be the meat of the book, Krug covers the five components for a highly usable site:
To help readers track their learning, Krug concludes the chapter by listing a series of "trunk test" sites in which he invites the reader to find the missing elements and suggest how each site could be improved. By stepping through these examples and showing how each of his design principles is applied, Krug helps the reader to internalize each key concept. While Don't Make Me Think has many positives, it does fall short in a couple areas.
If you are a Web site designer or a usability specialist, Don't Make Me Think will likely just be a light, quotable read. If you are not a professional designer yet either directly or indirectly contribute toward making Web sites or software products more usable, Don't Make Me Think would be a great addition to your library. And at Amazon's special promotional price of $24.50, perhaps you should also buy a couple extra copies and give them to colleagues you've been trying to convert into "usability faithful." Write the reviewer at mark@hallmark-consulting.com. |
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