If you can read French you'll find some example of these neuroscience techniques applied to various web sites to enhance the user journey at https://sapiensux.com/ . In most of these projects this was done to also improve some product metric (better conversion, more sales, less support), but these techniques apply to other contexts too.
There are exciting works on the load on brain activity when using tools such as smartphones. For example, this video shows the brain areas and functions activated when a user is asked to perform an action. It is shown that the load is high and the pleasure is low. Learning allows us to reduce this, but we can also imagine creating HMIs that are much more respectful of the way our brain actually works.
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x81jew9
Don't get me wrong, some of the marketing material I like the sound of, but I can use my smartphone just fine.
I would like more battery lifespan, phone hardware that I can easily fix, that the OS serves me not some megacorp. With a subscription business model, I am not sure why I would want it to run my phone.
Yes, many people think they can use their smartphone just fine. That doesn't mean that it's not a lot of learnt tolerance to less than ideal UX. It's fascinating to see brain activity involved when performing basic tasks.
> That doesn't mean that it's not a lot of learnt tolerance to less than ideal UX.
That's implying that there is "ideal UX" that would fit everyone and the current UX is not a series of compromises to try to be usable by anyone. I would personally think that's not the case.
Considering the OP's other comments here, I can't help but think that they're trying to solve the problem with a "we know better than you what you need" attitude. Their UX is the best, their website UI is the best, their policy towards a subscription model is the best, Yada Yada.
> sKreen pricing model relies on a subscription model: in exchange for a reasonable monthly fee, you will enjoy a sKreen device and its associated services.
Nope. Give me an option to own it and host it's services myself, or it's not even an upgrade over the current landscape of devices.
not really. They suggested it as a viable option for third party access, because they initially wanted to keep native apps as a first-party advantage, and not open the device unbundled software.
It has been tried a few times though, particularly by Palm (WebOS, now living inside LG smart TVs), and of course Mozilla tried a smartphone firefox OS for a while.
On the one hand, I'm glad that there's more public effort in developing user interfaces beyond what's 'standard,' today. It indicates that "the market" senses the need. I applaud this venture.
On the other hand, they could start by not using such an eye-searing color scheme for their website.
I like it a lot, it's bright and bold and has good contrast.
More sites and apps need to ditch the ridiculous dark mode fad and go bright and vivid, and I'm guessing most people who complain (and probably most dark mode adherents) have their display brightness set way too high.
(Open a new text document or anything else bright white, and hold a piece of new white paper up beside it. The white on your screen should be the same brightness and color temperature as the paper. If it's noticeably brighter, you need to turn down the brightness on your monitor and/or increase the amount of lighting in your room. Basic ergonomics.)
/e/ is a very nice project. However I think they will always be tied a bit too much to what Android upstream will do. There's a limit to what you can do by layering on top of an existing humongous base.
Maybe slightly different than this (which seems to be at an os level) but I would pay for new interfaces for social media apps/sites that make users less susceptible to social media addiction (or even interfaces that don’t explicitly optimize for maximizing the amount of time spent on a service).
Since this is based on KaiOS, I really hope they do a classic flip-phone style device. There's no better form factor for a phone you actually use to call people, and a lot of the current devices on the market are set to die off when carriers stop supporting 3G networks.
There are a few 4G-compatible flip phones on the market, but many of them SUCK. Call reliability issues, awful janky Android forks, T9 without smart punctuation (so you can't type words with apostrophes)... it's a space ripe fpr a new player to come in and just, like, remember how we did good interfaces 10-20 years ago.
I fail to understand, how can something built on KaiOS have privacy at its core ? [1]
"We also use your personal information to help us create, develop, operate, deliver, and improve our products, services, content, and advertising to improve your user experience continually."
39 comments
[ 4.6 ms ] story [ 103 ms ] threadDon't get me wrong, some of the marketing material I like the sound of, but I can use my smartphone just fine.
I would like more battery lifespan, phone hardware that I can easily fix, that the OS serves me not some megacorp. With a subscription business model, I am not sure why I would want it to run my phone.
That's implying that there is "ideal UX" that would fit everyone and the current UX is not a series of compromises to try to be usable by anyone. I would personally think that's not the case.
Nope. Give me an option to own it and host it's services myself, or it's not even an upgrade over the current landscape of devices.
> Web based OS
That's my exit. Good luck!
What's your complaint?
It has been tried a few times though, particularly by Palm (WebOS, now living inside LG smart TVs), and of course Mozilla tried a smartphone firefox OS for a while.
They were quite obviously saying that to hide their true intentions since they came out with an entire SDK very shortly after the iPhones release.
WebOS was the one web based OS for mobile. I'd like that back please!
On the other hand, they could start by not using such an eye-searing color scheme for their website.
Also, lighthouse claims we're good with contrast / lisibility :)
It’s judging a company that designs a smartphone UX experience by their website’s UX experience.
My eyes. I hit back.
More sites and apps need to ditch the ridiculous dark mode fad and go bright and vivid, and I'm guessing most people who complain (and probably most dark mode adherents) have their display brightness set way too high.
(Open a new text document or anything else bright white, and hold a piece of new white paper up beside it. The white on your screen should be the same brightness and color temperature as the paper. If it's noticeably brighter, you need to turn down the brightness on your monitor and/or increase the amount of lighting in your room. Basic ergonomics.)
Is there anything substantial here or some example of what they're building?
There are a few 4G-compatible flip phones on the market, but many of them SUCK. Call reliability issues, awful janky Android forks, T9 without smart punctuation (so you can't type words with apostrophes)... it's a space ripe fpr a new player to come in and just, like, remember how we did good interfaces 10-20 years ago.
"We also use your personal information to help us create, develop, operate, deliver, and improve our products, services, content, and advertising to improve your user experience continually."
[1] https://www.kaiostech.com/privacy-policy/