Landing Page |
Mosaic View |
Modal View - Single Picture |
Mobile View |
Mobile View - Feedback |
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Purpose of application: To help parents manage co-owning digital content of their children and family.
Present site on landing screen.
You were unfortunately unable to attend John’s soccer game, but your spouse was there and has uploaded pictures and videos to CoShare. You want to browse this content and
Present site on landing screen.
You just snapped a cool picture of Jane at her gymnastics meet and want to upload it to CoShare, but with so much going on, you don’t have the time to be on your phone for too long. You would also like to fully tag this picture later when you are on your desktop.
Task: Upload picture from the smart phone.
Present mobile site.
Later in the evening you are back at home and have logged into CoShare.
Present site on landing screen. See if they notice the new TASK to fully tag their recently uploaded picture from mobile. If not, prompt them to choose the Task and tag the picture appropriately.
We found these usability problems in the first iteration of our prototype, while testing on Users 1, 2 and 3.
During Task 2, users look for specific content uploaded by their spouse. In navigating from the landing page, the titles for “Recently Added” and “Recently Favorited” were meant to be links themselves. However, none of the three users clicked on these links. It seems we did not give these link proper visual affordances and they just looked like static text which did not initiate any action.
In Task 2 when uploading a picture from the mobile site, Users 2 and 3 both expressed that they were unclear if the picture had been uploaded on the mobile site because hitting “submit” merely removed the picture from the screen. There was no feedback confirming the result of their action, leaving it ambiguous.
When clicking to view a specific picture to tag during any task, the modal view appears over the current page. Users 1 and 2 were not aware that this was in fact a popup window and it could be closed as such with the X in the top right. Perhaps the visual affordances for making it seem like a popup window were not apparent enough in our prototype or the X was not large enough and too far the from the locus of attention of the user.
During Task 3, one great success we had was that all three users noticed the new task in the upper right corner of the landing page. This task indicates that certain pictures need to be refined that were previously uploaded from the mobile site.
Landing Page |
Mosaic View |
Modal View - Single Picture |
Modal View - Multiple PIctures |
Mobile View |
Mobile View - Feedback |
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Bad Affordances for Browsing:
Round 2 Observations
User 4 assumed you can only select one photo at a time- multiple selection mode was not visible or clear enough. User 6 tried to click multiple pictures in the mosaic view but clicking the first one would just brings up that individual picture.
All 3 users, upon creating a tag, believed the tag was automatically associated with the visible images, and no further action was needed. User 5 tried to drag to recently added tags into the “Create Tag” box. This was also a function of this being unclear on a paper prototype that it was a text input box.
Users 5 and 6 both took a lot of time on the landing page to realize what they needed to do to upload content. This had to do with the menu bar not being prominent, as well as the unclear text of “add content”. They also seemed to immediately look in the other sections of the page first, focusing in the wrong place for what they needed to do.
Users had various problems with understanding what buttons, labels, etc meant- something that could be made much clearer with just a few words of descriptive text. The selection mode in the mosaic, actions required for tagging, and the mark for review button all created some confusion. Some text would create an information scent that would lead users much better to the right actions for what they want to fo.