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by pickingdinner
1076 days ago
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This contradicts the premise. > hard (and therefore slow) to use. You assess the use case, as in each case the user goes from want to finish. If it's slow and hard, you fix that. 1 click is the fastest. An obvious button that does exactly what you want is the easiest. There is nothing slow or hard about an interface optimized based on a complete understanding of what the user wants to the point that they can distill it in one button. |
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What the user wants is important. Understanding how the user works in order to get there is also important. The most efficient path for a person is not necessarily the one with the fewest clicks/shortest mouse travel.