Laws of UX

(lawsofux.com)

61 points by bobbiechen2 hours ago

7 comments

  • nye2k1 hour ago
    This one pops up a lot - I love the design and poster aspect. I am always amazed how many of these 'Laws' trace back to Nielsen Norman Group data and research over the years. Many UX trends are even named after them! Jakobs law... Norman Door. UX professionals are being greatly influenced by this focused observer set. Maybe just my opinion, but modern UX and HCI theory is being held back day by day due to a set of gentle rules. Specifically, 'Rules' from exposed patterns across user experiences in Broadcast and other non-interactive media.
  • hungryhobbit41 minutes ago
    I liked the earlier page in this series, but this one feels kind of half-assed. Consider many of the first entries, like this one:<p>&quot;Cognitive Bias - A systematic error of thinking or rationality in judgment that influence our perception&quot;<p>That&#x27;s not a law! It&#x27;s barely even a useful concept in the form presented here!<p>Instead of being a useful collection of rules a UI designer&#x2F;dev can apply, this just feels like the author picked some terms, looked up their definition in the dictionary, and threw it all together so he could sell posters.
  • WhitneyLand7 minutes ago
    Maybe &lt;400ms is an inflection point but it sure isn’t optimal.<p>“Productivity soars when a computer and its users interact at a pace (&lt;400ms)”
  • Rygian1 hour ago
    Law #0: don&#x27;t reflowb or otherwise move around the UI element I&#x27;m going to click on.
    • itronitron1 hour ago
      also: don&#x27;t distract with unnecessary and unrelated graphics
  • hyperhello15 minutes ago
    Bad UX is anything that causes user frustration. However, engineers are taught that expressing frustration is uncivil.
  • qaid51 minutes ago
    Thanks for sharing this. After nearly a decade of being &quot;full stack&quot;, I&#x27;ve only now been diving more and more into UI and have barely touched the surface of UX.<p>Slightly off-topic, but are there any resources for common UI designs&#x2F;patterns especially for mobile&#x2F;webapps? e.g. hamburger menus, toast notifications, etc. I&#x27;ve been looking for a site that&#x27;s organized, comprehensive and with visual examples.
    • harulf39 minutes ago
      In a UI course I took at uni (~2009) we had Jennifer Tidwell&#x27;s book which was pretty much exactly what you&#x27;re asking for, though not catered for mobile due to smartphones just having come out. Seems like her most recent edition has a lot of mobile focus though:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.oreilly.com&#x2F;library&#x2F;view&#x2F;designing-interfaces-3rd&#x2F;9781492051954&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.oreilly.com&#x2F;library&#x2F;view&#x2F;designing-interfaces-3r...</a>
  • fantata1 hour ago
    [flagged]