[vicsireland] Re: What's so wrong with buttons?

  • From: "Cearbhall O Meadhra" <cearbhall.omeadhra@xxxxxx>
  • To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 28 Jul 2007 13:42:11 +0100

Hi Martin,

I have struggled for years to get my gym to provide a template but without
success. The problem with a fixed template is that you are forced to use
only one particular machine. Why not ask for a template to be put on every
screen. If you are right and nobody notices the adaptation then it shouldn't
interfere with anyone's use of any machine which has your template on it.

I have such a machine at home. This has a flexible plastic cover on it and I
found that I could rub my finger around and feel the button underneath the
cover on a good day. Other days I could not find the buttons. Finally, I got
my 10 year old to glue tiny points of superglue on the plastic cover,
carefully placed over the centre of the buttons. Now I have free and easy
access to all the controls! This could also be done in the gym don't you
think? Tiny spots like this leave the visual appearance unchanged and leave
the surface easy to clean. 

All the best,
 
 
Cearbhall 
 
"Good design enables - Bad design disables"
 
Tel: 01-2864623 Mob: 087 9922227 Em: cearbhall.omeadhra@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
 
From: vicsireland-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:vicsireland-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of martin kelly
Sent: 28 July 2007 10:46
To: vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: What's so wrong with buttons?

Hi Tim!

As I'm just home after the hols. you have probably sorted out your
difficulties around using your ultra modern treadmill but I'll tell you my
story as it may help other folk in the same position...

My Gym went up-market and replaced all the older but very tangible screens
with the latest versions of these machines.  However, after requesting that
one of the treadmills be made accessible to VIPs, I eventually needed to
suggest that the Equality Authority would be interested in this type of
localised discrimination.  I had made enquiries (and seen) various templates
which have been designed to address this very problem and I informed the
"powers that be" their existence.

To make a long story shorter, I can now work away on my own with the aid of
the template, the only problem is that other folk don't even realise that
the machine has been adapted and hop on board although several others are
lying idle.  So! i occasionally need to ask folk to move over but in a "nice
way" so that everyone can get the best from their membership fees.

You've excuse now Tim, so stay up with the pace?

Martin K

----- Original Message -----
From: "Ed Harper" <goat@xxxxxx>
To: <vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2007 10:31 AM
Subject: [vicsireland] Re: What's so wrong with buttons?


> Hi tim I fully sympathise, but I suspect the reason is that with 
> everything
> covered by smooth plastic there is less to get gunged up and go wrong and
> its probably easier to give a touch screen a wipe down.   But I doubt many
> of the things which have touch screens will survive long enough for that 
> to
> be really significant.
>
> Ed
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: vicsireland-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> [mailto:vicsireland-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Tim Culhane
> Sent: 11 July 2007 09:37
> To: vicsireland@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: [vicsireland] What's so wrong with buttons?
>
>
> Hi,
>
> ***  warning this is a major rant,  so if you're not in the mood  then
> delete this now ***
>
> I was told in the gym I go to last week that they were getting new
> threadmills this week.  Sure enough,  when I arrived in last night,  there
> they were.
>
> I had made a private bet with myself that these new machines  would be 
> the
> type that use touch sensitive controls, rather than good old fashioned
> buttons.  And guess what,  I've had to pay out to myself!
>
> The control pannel on the machines is a featureless mass of smooth 
> plastic.
> Even if your fingers had the sensitivity of an exposed root canal 
> treatment,
> I doubt they would be able to detect the buttons on the machine.
>
> I just can't understand what designers of these devices have against
> buttons.   Ironically the only button on the machine is the stop button,
> which is a huge plastic affair  which you could probably press with your
> elbow, let alone your finger.
>
> It seems that more and more these days  buttons  are just not the in 
> thing.
> For example, Apple's new IPhone has a touch sensitive screen rather than 
> the
> traditional phone keypad.  The machines which were slated for use in
> electronic voting had touch sensitive controls and now  even  the damn
> threadmills  can survive without  a button in sight  .... Or  even touch.
>
> Where will it all end?  Even now   somewhere I bet they are designing 
> shirts
> which have coloured dots on the material which you line up in order to
> "button"  up your shirt.  The fire alarms  will have a helpful notice 
> beside
> them saying brake glass and move your finger gently over the green circle
> below.  I'll be there, flames licking around my legs, trying to  find the
> green circle.
>
> Oh for the days  of nice clearly discernable buttons.    The nice big 
> square
> plastic ones,  or those funny shaped squishy rubber ones.   I even had a
> remote control once  where the buttons were actually in the shape of the
> print numerals!
>
> Its not even  that the  threadmill control pannel is particularly small or
> the display screen needs to be particularly big.    I reckon you could fit

> a
> decent size piano keyboard  on to the control pannel.  So I have to assume
> that the only reason these machines are designed in this way is to make 
> them
> look "fancy".
> Just another example  of design  for nobody  except those  with a
> pathelogical hatred of buttons.
>
> Anyway,  I'll finish up now,  but  if I ever meet one of these anti button
> designers,  I'll personally burn their eyes out with a red  hot poker and
> then make them  use there "fancy" new machines.
>
> Tim
>
>
> -------------------------
> Tim Culhane,
> Critical Path Ireland,
> 42-47 Lower Mount Street,
> Dublin 2.
> Direct line: 353-1-2415107
> phone: 353-1-2415000
>
> Tim.culhane@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> http://www.criticalpath.net
>
> Critical Path
> a global leader in digital communications
> ------------------------
>
>
>
>
>
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