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by 65
142 days ago
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I read the Design of Everyday Things and most of it was painfully obvious examples and was overly philosophical. Design is solving problems so they're intuitive for the user. Obviously a door with a handle shouldn't be a push door, I don't really think you need to write a book about it. And the types of people creating bad design are generally constrained by cost, time, or practicality, not necessarily by education. |
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It’s common to illustrate principles with examples that appear obvious, i.e. that everyone agrees on, so that after having it conceptualized as a principle, you’ll apply it in less obvious circumstances. Many things are obvious only in hindsight.
> And the types of people creating bad design are generally constrained by cost, time, or practicality, not necessarily by education.
That’s not true, because a lot of flawed design is being promoted and defended in public as the thing to do.