The Internet, visualised

The Internet from Encyclopedia Pictura on Vimeo.



Animation that visualises the internet as a real place with all sorts of happenings and goings on. Quite a few people have tried to explain the online experience as more than viewing a series of interconnected pages, and I would say that this is one of the few that gets close to what the experience is like (for some at least).

via EncyclopediaPictura

New Samsung Phone Replaces "Pinch to Zoom" With Less Catchy "Move Phone Closer to Your Face to Zoom"

Fantastic new smart phone interface means that rather than pinching the screen to zoom in, you just have to move it closer to your face in order to get the same effect. Simple user interaction smoothly executed.




Instead of the traditional pinch-to-zoom, resting two fingers atop the screen will allow you to zoom in by bringing the S II closer to your face or zoom out by holding it further away -- a naturalistic gesture that makes all the sense in the world to us. Moreover, when adding new widgets to your home panels, you'll be able to move between them by propelling the phone laterally.

via Android Community

Menu design



Rapp recommends that menus be laid out in neat columns with unfussy fonts. The way prices are listed is very important. “This is the No. 1 thing that most restaurants get wrong,” he explains. “If all the prices are aligned on the right, then I can look down the list and order the cheapest thing.” It’s better to have the digits and dollar signs discreetly tagged on at the end of each food description. That way, the customer’s appetite for honey-glazed pork will be whetted before he sees its cost.

Also important is placement. On the basis of his own research and existing studies of how people read, Rapp says the most valuable real estate on a two-panel menu (one that opens like a magazine) is the upper-right-hand corner. That area, he says, should be reserved for more profitable dishes since it is the best place to catch–and retain–the reader’s gaze.

Cheap, popular staples–like a grilled-chicken sandwich or a burger–should be harder to locate. Rapp likes to make the customer read through a mouthwatering description of seared ahi tuna before he finds them. “This is akin to the grocery store putting the milk in the back,” he says. “You have to walk by all sorts of tempting, high-priced items to get to it.”

The adjectives lavished on a dish can be as important as the names of the ingredients. What would you rather eat, plain grilled chicken or flame-broiled chicken with a garlic rub? Scrambled eggs or farm-fresh eggs scrambled in butter? “Think ‘flavors and tastes,’” Rapp says, repeating a favorite mantra. “Words like crunchy and spicy give the customer a better idea of what something will be like.” Longer, effusive descriptions should be reserved for signature items.

Read more here:

http://nudges.org/2008/11/26/menu-design-tricks-to-get-you-to-spend-more/

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1200775,00.html