[AccessD] Good Interface Examples

Charlotte Foust cfoust at infostatsystems.com
Thu May 22 09:41:55 CDT 2003


Studies may show that, buy my own experience suggests otherwise.  I
remember the old green and amber screen and white on black monitors and
I can say without doubt that it is easier to read blank on white
displays than those horrors!
 
Charlotte Foust

	-----Original Message-----
	From: Roz Clarke [mailto:roz.clarke at donnslaw.co.uk] 
	Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2003 5:46 AM
	To: 'accessd at databaseadvisors.com'
	Subject: RE: [AccessD] Good Interface Examples
	
	
	Psych studies have actually shown that the human eye
differentiates light on dark more easily than dark on light and a dark
background (making up, as it does, most of the screen) should cause less
strain to the eyes, being less bright.
	 
	However, I think that we find reading white-on-black easiest
because we've all been habituated to it from reading books.
	 
	Roz

		-----Original Message-----
		From: John Bartow [mailto:john at winhaven.net] 
		Sent: 22 May 2003 14:09
		To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com
		Subject: RE: [AccessD] Good Interface Examples
		
		
		Drew,
		I don't care for white on black. Your site isn't too bad
because there isn't much to read (and I like the wolf logo) but more
than a paragraph or so and the eye strain gets pretty heavy.
		 
		To be positive though, it is better than red on black,
which I have seen on at least one web site! Yeeoucch! Talk about eye
strain!
		 
		JB

			-----Original Message-----
			From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com
[mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com]On Behalf Of Drew Wutka
			Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2003 8:38 PM
			To: 'accessd at databaseadvisors.com'
			Subject: RE: [AccessD] Good Interface Examples
			
			
			Oh, okay.  Personally I like to stick to black
and white, as often as possible.  Literally.  I use black backgrounds
with white text.  I just think it sticks out better then black on white.
However, something to keep in mind, color is nice, however, a large
portion of the population is color blind to a certain extent.  Always be
sure that places where color is used, and differentiating things of
different color is important, to use colors that 'clash' spectrally, so
even if someone is seeing it as shades of grey (a severe color blind
person), they would still see the difference.
			 
			That's my only tip......
			 
			Drew

				-----Original Message-----
				From: Roz Clarke
[mailto:roz.clarke at donnslaw.co.uk]
				Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2003 4:07 AM
				To: 'accessd at databaseadvisors.com'
				Subject: RE: [AccessD] Good Interface
Examples
				
				
				We're about to start designing the
interface for a data mining application. My team hasn't had any formal
training on interface design, and I didn't want them to get all their
ideas from me - better if they have a range of examples! So we're having
a couple of workshops where we discuss design principles before we start
doing the spec. This application will take a few weeks to write and, if
we get it right, be in use for 2-3 years so it's worth putting some
thought into.
				 
				Roz

				-----Original Message-----
				From: Drew Wutka
[mailto:DWUTKA at marlow.com] 
				Sent: 20 May 2003 20:10
				To: 'accessd at databaseadvisors.com'
				Subject: RE: [AccessD] Good Interface
Examples
				
				
				What kind of 'interface' are you looking
for?
				 
				Drew

				-----Original Message-----
				From: Roz Clarke
[mailto:roz.clarke at donnslaw.co.uk]
				Sent: Tuesday, May 20, 2003 4:53 AM
				To: 'accessd at databaseadvisors.com'
				Subject: [AccessD] Good Interface
Examples
				
				

				Hi all 

				Does anybody remember a looong time ago
we had a discussion about interface design, and someone was hosting a
gallery of different interfaces that had been done with Access?

				Does anybody know if it's still there,
where it was, and whether there are any other good resources out there? 

				TIA 

				Roz 

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