Posts Tagged Usability

PictoSense

In my previous post I had mused about adding sense to the media library. I was considering how one could make a media libary - tagged for people, locations and time - available in an entertaining way. The departure point for this thought process was the growing number of family and personal pictures that I currently have and manage but for which the tools are so arcane that my family would not enjoy using them.

Since then the idea has continued to pop into my thoughts demanding refinement. As a follower of GTD principles I figured that if I was to ever stop my brain from tinkering with this I’d better start jotting things down. Hopefully that’ll save me from having to keep track of things in my head and this constrantly rummaging around up there.
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Adding sense to the media library

I’ve had quite a bit of time on my hands the last few days - being sick tends to provide that oh, so valued commodity which tends to escape us as active adults. I’ve used the time to get through some of the backlog of my snapshot database.

The libary

As you may recall, I’m pretty anal when it comes to the family’s picture archive. When we purchased our first digital camera what feels like eons ago, I quickly realized that we would end up with fairly large library over the years. And as with any largish library it would need management. So I set about tagging the images, a tedious but necessary evil if we were ever to make sense of the thing 20 years down the line. I won’t go into the details of the workflow here and just mention that I tag pretty much anything for: who took the shot, the person in the shot and the location it was taken at.

Recently I’ve started wondering how this data can be put to good use. My current toolset can very nicely tell me what I generally need to know, where something was taken, by whom etc. It will only tell me those things because I know the tools. That’s fine as long as I’m the only user, but that’s not really the point of the library. How could this library be made accessible to others (e.g family and friends) and if so what are the salient features I would put at their disposal given the meta-data at hand?

After a little pondering a couple of things seem essential: a timeline, locations, and people. Whomever would have access would like to have the ability to sort and filter data based on these criteria. These are fairly simple features which I’m sure can be found in a number of user friendly pieces of software.

Architecting a new libary

Yet how do you bring those to the user in an entertaining way? The idea of entertainment also seems a key criteria. Whomever would view our library would likely not be looking to trudge through thousands of pictures. Rather, this person would be interested in the story that the pictures tell.

Figuring out what the libary viewer, for lack of a better name, would look like and how its usage could be desinged is what’s been prickling my mind. The way I go about figuring this out is to answer the following question: “What are the storylines one could derive from the meta-data in the library?” It’s not the easiest of questions to answer and If you’d like to participate then please feel free to comment…

Time and space:

For one we can use locations pictures were taken over time using the location information and the time a picture was taken. For this I envisage a map of the world with a bracketed timeline. The map would display pictures, or rather some form of reference to pictues for a given time bracket. These references could be bubbles which vary in size with the number of pictures that were taken around a given location for instance. The timeline would function very much like the one found on Google Finance. It would allow you to set the width of the bracket (i.e how many days, months etc. to take into account) and allow you to slide that bracket over time. When you slide the bracket the references on the map would change in accordance.

The timline and map would work in conjunction to filter the pictures to those that you’re interested in. Other features would include the ability to zoom in and out on the map and the ability to click on a reference (bubble) to further filter the pictures. The pictures themselves could be listed in several ways although my personal preference would go to a filmstrip type of listing.

Relationships

Another idea would be to use the people in the shot. As each picture has an author and one or more people in the picture one can establish a sense of relation both between the author of the shot and his subjects as well as betwen people in the shot.

The first thing that springs to mind in this regard is a graphical representation of relations between the people. The strengh of the relation would be relative to the number of times any 2 people were in the same shot together. Something like the Visual Thesaurus would be an interesting start piont The central weight points could be around the authors as they’d could be considered to be in every shot - that’s debatable though, one should see how this works out in the data representation.

One could thus navigate the picture database solely based on the relations of people. Selecting one or multiple people would filter the number of people in the shot.

A second feature which could be added is the timeline. This could be achieved in very much the same way as with the “Time and Space” idea such that selecting a time-frame would restrict the number of people shown.

Further afield

I’m sure that there’s more ways to view this information, but for now my brain is fried - I am sick after all… To be continued then.

Do leave me a comment or two in case you want to contribute

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Photosynth gone live

A few months ago I had blogged about PhotoSynth, an application whose most salient features is that has the ability to reconstruct spatial relations from a set of pictures. In essence it’s photo stitching software but smarter. At the time the product was buried somewhere in the Miscrosoft Labs. That’s no longer the case. PhotoSynth has finally graduated and is now available to the public at large.

As could be expected of such an intriguing piece of software it had a bit of a rocky launch. The public’s enthusiasm overwhelmed the servers and Microsoft had to shut down part of the service to add some more capacity.

At any rate. I’m sure I’ll be testing it out, as soon as they release a Mac version.

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Zooming page navigation

Let’s be honest. I’m not the biggest of fans of Microsoft. Their commercial software is bloated, slow and suffers from severe featuritis.

That being said, not everything they do is bad. Their Labs work has, on occasion, peaked my interest. Unfortunately most of what I like is not likely to turn into a commercially viable (and affordable) product for some time.

A while ago I came across a demo of PhotoSynth an offshoot of research by Noah Snavely (UW), Steve Seitz (UW), and Richard Szeliski (Microsoft Research). The main commercial appeal of the application is its ability to reconstruct spatial relations from a set of pictures. What peaked my interest however was its ability to infinitely zoom in, something it inherited from SeaDragon. This aspect is beautifully demonstrated in the demo.

The ability to navigate information by visually zooming in and out of it has always had a certain appeal to me. Two aspects of this are particularly inviting: loose understanding of hierarchy; visual representation of the information being accessed. Personally I’ve always had issues with constrained navigation.

Text based, hierarchical menus provide little insight as to what is actually “beyond” what’s being displayed. These types of navigation schemes emphasize “reading” and “understanding” rather than “context” and “impression”. Both schemes have their applications and will work better under certain circumstances. I won’t even pretend to know which applies best where. What I have noticed is that web design sites (amongst others) tend stand out by their innovative navigation schemes.

One of the sites with a novel navigation schema is schematic.com. Their navigation scheme applies some of the concepts I found so appealing in PhotoSynth while retaining hierarchical understanding. Zooming in and out of individual pages, while at the same time still retaining the visual impression of all the pages in the site was a wonderful user experience.

Hopefully there will be more such sites in the future.

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Mine mine mine. want it now!

The video below is of Anand Agarawala presenting BumpTop, a cool natural feeling user interface that takes the usual desktop metaphor to a whole new level. It emulates the physical world and your own desk down to the physics of it. You can throw things, stack things, crumple things, lay them out like a poker deck. You can make important things big, fold other ones, pin a third to the wall.

Put this together with decent tactile experience and we’re really getting somewhere. Watch it on ted.com

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Graph that site

Following a Flickr post from Splorp I got to look at a cool little tool which graphs out a website. It makes for some pretty pictures.

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Images that matter

10×10 and you’ve got all you need to know. Every hour, the 10×10 website collects the 100 words and pictures that matter most on a global scale, and presents them as a single image, taken to encapsulate that moment in time.

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Translation Issues on Belgium's Federal Portal

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Magic indeed

The French have called it the stupidest roundabout in Europe, the Germans just called it crazy. Swindon’s roundabout certainly leaves one a little bemused.

You have to wonder what the guys at the Road Research Laboratory were smoking back in the seventies.

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Rack ‘em and stack ‘em

Steven Drucker just blows my mind! His current work on organising digital media is just amazing.

Those of you who read this blog regularly know I have a love affair with my digital camera. My first flirt was with the Sony F-707. My tastes evolving, I now answer to the call of my beloved Canon EOS 300D.

On a good day I happily snap away 30 or more pictures, half of which I end up storing for later. Storage media being cheap these days the megabytes of image data stack up pretty quickly. The drawback is that you need a decent archiving system - if you intend to exploit all of this at a later stage. That’s where tools like Steven Drucker’s Media Browser come in real handy.

The basic idea behind most photo archiving tools is some form of indexation, usually though keywords, topics or dates. In my experience there are a number of hurdles to overcome when you intend to organise your growing library.

One of these hurdles has to do with keywords. When you initially set up your library you need to think very carefully about how you will organise it. You have to think ahead and imagine the various ways in which you will want to search, view and otherwise exploit your database. Changing the setup at a later stage can be very cumbersome. Fortunately, most tools come with pre-built categories which help you in this task.

Another hurdle to overcome with photo cataloguing software is the user interface itself. Some interfaces are just plain better than others. What you want is an intuitive interface with which you feel comfortable. The main point here is that the interface “does things for you” so to speak - it should be akin to your thinking process and follow you every step of the way.

Where does this leave us in regards to Mr. Drucker? He’s quite simply built the mother of all interfaces. The word “simple” being the key. To use his own words, what he set out to do was:

[...]create a single application that brings together a variety of recent UI advances into a single consistent, visually attractive, and easy to use application for applying labels to image and video files meaningful to the user.
[source: "MediaFrame - Reclaiming the Shoebox" by S.M. Drucker]

From the small preview I’ve seen of his work, he’s definitely succeeded. I’m looking forward to seeing the commercial application of this coming out once they’ve sorted out the scaleability issues

Errata:

My pics for photo archiving software:

But don’t take my word for it. Have a look at the Google Graphics > Image Cataloguing”>directory

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