Megalextoria
Retro computing and gaming, sci-fi books, tv and movies and other geeky stuff.

Home » Archive » net.micro.mac » MIT course: Styles of User Interaction
Show: Today's Messages :: Show Polls :: Message Navigator
E-mail to friend 
Switch to threaded view of this topic Create a new topic Submit Reply
MIT course: Styles of User Interaction [message #83347] Mon, 10 June 2013 21:41
jsgray is currently offline  jsgray
Messages: 24
Registered: May 2013
Karma: 0
Junior Member
Message-ID: <11073@watmath.UUCP>
Date: Tue, 22-Jan-85 11:16:22 EST
Article-I.D.: watmath.11073
Posted: Tue Jan 22 11:16:22 1985
Date-Received: Wed, 23-Jan-85 05:08:06 EST
Distribution: net
Organization: U of Waterloo, Ontario
Lines: 50
Xref: watmath net.micro.mac:425 net.lang.st80:153 net.cog-eng:446 net.cse:326

I just received this *very* interesting MIT course outline that I just *had*
to share with you...[apologies if this is a repeat]

Jan Gray (jsgray@watmath.UUCP)   University of Waterloo   (519) 885-1211 x3870


Styles of User Interaction
Lippman and Kay
Spring Semester

Materials:
	25 512K touch-screen Macintoshs running MacSmalltalk.
	Any additional LISA's and Macs that might be available.
	All will be networked to a file server, laser printer, and
	  gateway to AMT LAN.

	Book by Paul Heckel
	Book by Dick Bolt
	Misc. papers by well-known user-interactivists

The Macs will be set up in a MacGarden that can double as a classroom ala
Brown.  The Smalltalk is *not* Smalltalk-80 but a carefully trimmed version that
is easier to use than the old Smalltalk-72 for kids.

Direction:

The course in intended to be exploratory with the students doing most of the
legwork.  As in Heckel's book we will not state hard interactin principles that
have been handed down on RAND tablets from past generations.  Rather, the
intent will be to get studets to become designers so they can compare different
interaction styles and then make up their own.

The first part of the semester will be spent trying different interaction styles
now in vogue.  MacSmall will have a variety of models to which use interfaces
can be fit, including: browser, word processor, spread-sheet, draw and paint,
animation, and music.  The last part, and most student projects, wll be
concerned with two new interaction principles: Agents, and Multi-channel
Interaction.

After the students have done enough to be critical of most approaches, talks by
distinguished user-interaction designers will commence.

Discussion topics will include:
	Human factors of displays and controllers
	"Modeless" Interaction
	Easy To Learn vs. Hard To Use
	Doing with Images makes Symbols
	User tailored/written software
	Agents
	Multi-channel interaction
  Switch to threaded view of this topic Create a new topic Submit Reply
Previous Topic: recent binhex postings
Next Topic: MacFonts1 & MacFonts2
Goto Forum:
  

-=] Back to Top [=-
[ Syndicate this forum (XML) ] [ RSS ] [ PDF ]

Current Time: Thu Nov 21 23:04:16 EST 2024

Total time taken to generate the page: 0.02522 seconds