| By Richard Monson-Haefel | Article Rating: |
|
| April 2, 2008 02:45 PM EDT | Reads: |
14,096 |
If you design an application that runs on Windows but doesn't look exactly like Windows, so the old argument goes, the effect will be unsettling for users. But sticking to the native look and feel (L&F) should not be the end-goal of designers.
In May of 2007 Bill Higgins penned a thought provoking blog post called, “the Uncanny Valley of user interface design.” His assertion was that any UI that tries to emulate a modern Windows look and feel (L&F) but is not exactly the same as the native operating systems L&F (i.e. Windows, Mac, Linux), will be unsettling to developers. He refers to this as the “Uncanny Valley.”
The Uncanny Valley is a theory proposed by Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori in 1970, that says that people’s impression of robots grows more empathetic as robots become more human looking – but only to a point. There is a point at which the designers make the robot look almost human, but not quite. Humans find this less-than-perfect emulation unsettling and are thus put off by the robot.
Figure 1: The Uncanny Valley
(This copyright notice supersedes the one auto-generated at the foot of this page.)
Published April 2, 2008 Reads 14,096
Copyright © 2008 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Richard Monson-Haefel
Richard Monson-Haefel, an award-winning author and technical analyst, owns Richard Monson-Haefel Consulting. Formerly he was VP of Developer Relations at Curl Inc. and before that a Senior Analyst at The Burton Group. He was the lead architect of OpenEJB, an open source EJB container used in Apache Geronimo, a member of the JCP Executive Committee, member of JCP EJB expert groups, and an industry analyst for Burton Group researching enterprise computing, open source, and Rich Internet Application (RIA) development.
- 4th International Cloud Computing Conference & Expo Starts Today
- 1st Annual GovIT Expo: Letter from the Technical Chair
- SAP CTO to Speak at 4th International Cloud Computing Expo
- Current Trends in the Data Management Market
- SOA World Magazine "Readers' Choice Awards" Voting Is Now Open
- Cloud Computing Journal Continues To Publish World's Best Cloud Analysts
- Is AT&T Apple's Achilles Heel?
- Apps.gov Will Help Federal Agencies Embrace the Cloud: Vivek Kundra
- Oracle-Sun: Gartner Suspects EC of Ulterior Motives
- Computers Are Just Tools; Computer Science Is About People
- 4th International Cloud Computing Conference & Expo Starts Today
- 1st Annual GovIT Expo: Letter from the Technical Chair
- Ruby-on-Rails Apps Get Cloud Lift
- SAP CTO to Speak at 4th International Cloud Computing Expo
- Stress & Load Testing Web Apps (Even ADF & Apex) Using Apache JMeter
- SOA in the Cloud Topic Launched on Ulitzer
- Current Trends in the Data Management Market
- SOA World Magazine "Readers' Choice Awards" Voting Is Now Open
- Cloud Computing Journal Continues To Publish World's Best Cloud Analysts
- Is AT&T Apple's Achilles Heel?
- Web Services Using ColdFusion and Apache CXF
- Eclipse "Pollinate" Project to Integrate with Apache Beehive
- Red Hat Named "Platinum Sponsor" of Virtualization Conference & Expo
- Apache's Tomcat 5.5 is First Release Ever to Use Eclipse JDT Java Compiler
- Beehive Code Now Available in Apache
- An Introduction to Ant
- "Beehive" Now Officially an Open Source Project: Apache Beehive
- SourceLabs Completes Open Source Java Middleware Platform With Apache Tomcat
- Apache Announces Jetspeed 2.0 Open Source Enterprise Portal
- How to Build RIAs with Apache Derby and Grizzly Comet

































