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Microsoft Hires GUI 'Design Guru'

overpayd writes "ZDnet is reporting that Microsoft has hired 'user interface guru' Bill Buxton to work as a senior researcher. Will this move help focus the design teams for Vista, Office, etc? From the article: 'My sense is that Microsoft is in transition from an engineering-led company to as much a design-led company ... There are more designers at Microsoft on any single team as there were, not too long ago, in the entire company. It's a wonderful change.'"

15 of 246 comments (clear)

  1. bad slashdot! by Coneasfast · · Score: 5, Informative

    title: Microsoft Hires GUI 'Design Guru'

    slashdot misleads again.
    he is not a GUI design guru, he is a human-machine interaction guru.
    this article has no direct relation to GUIs.

    i can handle the dupes, but it's very bad practice to post misleading information
    (hint to Zonk: READ the article before posting).

    --
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    1. Re:bad slashdot! by BushCheney08 · · Score: 5, Funny

      ...he is a human-machine interaction guru.

      So he's an expert in robosex, eh?

      --
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    2. Re:bad slashdot! by donutello · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Further, his own page, which was linked to from the article, states that he will be working at Microsoft Research. It doesn't take much thought to conclude that it's very unlikely that someone who just got hired at Microsoft Research would have a significant, if any, impact on Vista and Office 12 which are already in Beta.

      Please put some thought into article summaries.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    3. Re:bad slashdot! by Mantrid · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Good design is both very important and very difficult to get right. However this probably means you need a few good designers not more designers. A good UI that make sense to your typical user is not easy to do, especially if you plan on doing anything different from the norm.

    4. Re:bad slashdot! by nateziarek · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Good design is one of the most time consuming processes I've ever participated in. It really doesn't just flow out from no where. UI Design (the act of slapping widgets on a screen) is quick. Good or Proper UI Design (that act of researching how people use a product, determining the best way (sequence of actions, icon image) to communicate an action or response, etc) is grueling and takes time.

      Of course its all OT - the article isn't even about design in the typical sense (pixels on a page)...

    5. Re:bad slashdot! by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 5, Funny

      "[...] his own page, which was linked to from the article, states that he will be working at Microsoft Research."

      Well, then, Mr. Buxton, let me be the first person to welcome you to Apple.

      (Sorry. Couldn't resist.)

    6. Re:bad slashdot! by covertbadger · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Wow, you really have no idea what HCI is, do you? I'm a straight up coder, and even I know that HCI isn't analogous to 'interior design'. HCI is supposed to cover all the ways that you interact with your computer - keyboard shortcuts (and yes, that includes the idea of having the cut/copy/paste keys right next to each other - that happens *because* of HCI work, not in spite of it), muscle memory, principle of least surprise, hotspots (e.g. it's easier to move your cursor to one of the four corners of the screen than it is to any other location) and so on. About the only 'interior design' that shows up is stuff like not having green text on a red background, or anything else that makes your eyes bleed.

    7. Re:bad slashdot! by IAmTheDave · · Score: 4, Funny

      No no, he was hired for Microsoft's next Windows release - Windows 2014, codename Windows "Hang on, we're coming..."

      --
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    8. Re:bad slashdot! by Altus · · Score: 5, Funny


      Thats it! Im catching the next Pimpmobile out of here!

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

  2. not sure what they'll do with Burton by yagu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Okay, I'm done reading about three articles about Bill Buxton. Sounds like a bright and interesting guy.

    Now, the litmus test, which Microsoft repeatedly fails, will be whether Microsoft cares or is willing to listen to this guy and his ideas. In my opinion, Microsoft's hiring of high-profile talents or personalities in the past has been more for:

    • squashing opposing or interesting "other" ideas.
    • presenting themselves to the public as progressive, innovative, and creative

    The last great creative mind I remember at Microsoft was Nathan Myhrvold, and I can't remember any great contributions from him.

    As for Burton's quote about the move and Microsoft:

    My sense is that Microsoft is in transition from an engineering-led company to...a design-led company

    Microsoft always has been and always be a Gates/Ballmer-led company, and that's not about engineering, and that's not about design. Waxing eloquent about his new employer is quaint, but Burton sheds no light on Microsoft's intentions or future directions. If history serves, no changes are in the offing.

    This is news, but it isn't big news, and it isn't very interesting news.

    1. Re:not sure what they'll do with Burton by mccalli · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Microsoft always has been and always be a Gates/Ballmer-led company

      Well, no. Microsoft used to be a Gates-Allen company, and it's arguable as to whether figureheads aside it was actually an Allen-Gates company. It used to be a lot better than it is now too. Sounds hard to believe I know, but in the late eighties some of us were actually rooting for Microsoft, not against.

      Cheers,
      Ian

  3. More informative articles about Bill Buxton by eltoyoboyo · · Score: 5, Informative

    TFA is remarkably uninformative. Do not bother with it, if it becomes slashdotted.

    This article (PC or people--who's the boss?) has an interview with him today.

    Bill Addresses his Microsoft transition on his home page: http://www.billbuxton.com/

    He is cited in the Wikipedia article about Human-computer interaction.

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  4. Re:Now if only by tbone1 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    • Someone got this guy to work on a *nix desktop environment. For such a powerfull operating system it has a crippled userinterface.

    Oh, I wouldn't say that ...

    --

    The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
  5. Re:Can anyone translate this? by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As far as I can tell, engineering is trying to create a solution for a problem.
    Design, on the other hand, extends engineering by trying to figure out the problem first.

    For things like bridges, the problem is fairly self evident: There is a gap or chasm to cross. It is synonymous to design or engineer a bridge.
    Airports, on the other hand, are much tougher problems to tackle. You don't engineer an airport, you design an airport.

    Maybe a better way to put it is: Designers work around the requirements of people. Engineers work around the requirements of the problem.

    If you have a designer involved, the engineers will have already taken into account the requirements of the people. If you don't have a designer around, then the engineers have to fake it and come up with ad hoc solutions to meet the unexpected needs of the people you are trying to help.

  6. bad slashdotter by flithm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As someone who has personally seen Bill Buxton speak, and also as someone who has had HCI (Human Computer Interaction as the field is actually called) training, I can say that for once the Zonk is not totally wrong.

    I agree he should have read the article before posting, but it's also not correct to say he has no direct relation to GUIs. He speaks very much of design and how to make proper GUIs. In fact he actually teaches design at his university.

    A big part of HCI is GUI design. How could it not be? After all how do most humans interact with computers?

    To quote Bill Buxton:

    "Not only should you get the design right, but more importantly, you should get the right design."

    He is most certainly a guru of design, and that includes GUI.