It’s Dr. Seuss’s birthday today! It’s been a few years since I celebrated the good doctor with Dr. Seuss’s ode to usability.
This time I created the Dr. Seuss iPad usability version to summarize some key points in my upcoming web seminar: iPad Usability: 10 design rules that improve iPad user adoption
Dr. Seuss on iPad Usability
Swiping, tapping, tipping, topping…Hoping that your app is popping?
Users here, users there, users installing apps everywhere.
The question is will they stay or will they go, and how the HECK will you know?
Sit, stand, run, jump- this App is not made for walking and if I have to focus, is no good for talking. In an office or on a couch, this App better run as well as crouch. Context they say is the trigger that can make adoption of your app even bigger.
iTip, iTap, iCan, Not interact with your super App. Click, tap, pinch, zoom, everywhere I go is like a puzzle, I think this app is a naughty dog that needs a muzzle!
Never mind there’s another App that is just as easy to tap.
Shake I can, tilt and zoom but let me know when something’s changing.
Feed me back what I’m doing, else I’ll think you’re broken and not tap-worthy, Oh. Now THAT would be a lonely place to go!
Can I touch, or can I see, how to navigate these seas? And please take heed to exaggerate my tasks, it’s the reason– I pay the fees!
Don’t forget: tipping, turning all around, your design must support the user’s merry-go-round.
Did I tell you my fat finger rules? That should be a message- no design fools!
Lest, you’ll end up in the graveyard of “Apps Not Used”.
😉
Dr. Seuss ought to be called Dr. Fun:
“I like nonsense, it wakes up the brain cells. Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living.” -Dr. Seuss