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Usability in the Movies -- Top 10 Bloopers

Ant writes "A UseIt.com article talks about user interfaces (UIs) in film that are more exciting than they are realistic, and heroes have far too easy a time using foreign systems. The way Hollywood depicts usability could fill many a blooper reel. Here are 10 of the most egregious mistakes made by moviemakers. From the article: '3. The 3D UI - In Minority Report, the characters operate a complex information space by gesturing wildly in the space in front of their screens. As Tog found when filming Starfire, it's very tiring to keep your arms in the air while using a computer. Gestures do have their place, but not as the primary user interface for office systems.'"

15 of 382 comments (clear)

  1. Ridiculous... by aendeuryu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ok ok, we get the point about the UI in Minority Report, but COME ON, it's not like it's the most implausible thing about the movie. Same with Star Trek... Oh yeah, a computer that speaks and understands English, that's weird. Fifteen space alien races we encounter for the first time that speak and understand English, TOTALLY NORMAL. A kid saving the day with a 3d unix interface. Yeah, that just totally ruined the whole movie for me, because up until that point I was totally believing in THE DINOSAURS...

    Methinks a bit of perspective is called for...

    1. Re:Ridiculous... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, but on the other hand a glaring flaw in the depiction of a knowledge area with which you are familiar can detract from the experience. I'm sure there are many doctors and biomedical researchers that cringe every time they see movies about bioweapons and genetically-engineered mutant monsters.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:Ridiculous... by aendeuryu · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But for the most part, these anomalies serve a purpose -- they help push the story forward, or at the very least keep it from getting pushed back. Consider this... every Slashdotter here is an expert when it comes to toilet use. Do we cry out in anger when an entire movie goes by and nobody uses the can? Of course not. It's just not important to the story, and I consider a character that never uses the facilities during the course of most movies' narrative timeframe to be a LOT more unrealistic than an overly flashy GUI.

      Movies, ESPECIALLY Hollywood sci-fi movies, aren't made primarily to be depictions of reality. Verisimilitude has its place, but not when it's going to slow down the narrative progress.

    3. Re:Ridiculous... by Garridan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      2 possible justificaions for your argument:

      1) You don't consider it feasible to go 2 solid hours without taking a leak.

      2) You think that, perhaps, in a 2 hour movie whose plot spans an entire month, watching the characters urinate will be more important than other material. Don't get me wrong. I'm all for pee -- I make quite a habit of it myself. But c'mon. Does it matter for the story?

  2. searching is easy too by sharp-bang · · Score: 2, Insightful

    He forgot the highly accurate Hollywood search engine, which enabled Tom Cruise to put a Bible verse into an Internet search engine in Mission Impossible and get three hits, yet not support Boolean searching until Deanna Troi invents it in Star Trek: the Next Generation.

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    #!
  3. What about enhance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can't believe they left out the enhance functionality, making a someones face from twenty feet away appear crystal clear on a 320x240 ATM camera.

  4. Another list article... great... by geekmansworld · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Who writes these things? And why do they get posted on Slashdot endlessly?

    First off, I found the 3D interface from Minority Report to be fascinating; and given the unique function of the computer who is to say that it wasn't the most efficient manner of manipulating the data? Second, I noticed that in Star Trek characters generally used keypads/control panels for complex tasks, while others could be dictated more speedily and/or helped the character focus his or her thoughts. This seemed perfectly justifiable to me.

    And yes, for the UMPTEENTH time, the UNIX GUI from Jurassic Park was silly. You are not the first person to have noticed this. But the fact is that having much of that incredibly tense scene plunked out on a keyboard in a monochrome command line would have put most audiences to sleep.

    Is it necessary to hack apart some of our favorite geek fiction without the slightest suspension of disbelief so that some of us can feel hoity-toity about their computer savvy? Please...

  5. Best movie usability scene ever. by greenguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Luke, you've switched off your targeting computer. What's wrong?"

    --
    What if I do the same thing, and I do get different results?
  6. Linux by oGMo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, far before Apple (by about a decade) making Unix available to the common man, there was Linux. What was funny about that then was the unlikelihood of a kid having access to a Unix system. What was even funnier a few years later (by 97 or 98) was the fact that it was no longer unlikely! Kids, even 12-year-olds, had access to Linux and were using it and learning it.

    Really, when I saw this one, I had to check the date on the article, because I thought it was quite old. The biggest examples of most of these are things like the first Mission Impossible, Independence Day, and as mentioned, Jurassic Park.

    --

    Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage

    1. Re:Linux by MikeFM · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I had a Linux system about the time I was 14 and I could use it very well. I'll take argument with the notion that UI is inconsistant and hard to use in Unix. Sitting down at a bash command line and most basic XWindow apps is the same on any system - even before KDE and Gnome made them more colorful. Of course the interface used in Jurrasic Park is retarded.. wasn't it some sort of experimental file explorer by SGI?

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
  7. User Interface? Minority Report. by noretsa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does anyone else question why we are taking user interface advice from a guy whose website looks like it was designed in notepad? The Minority Report user interface was actually designed by industry professionals at Microsoft Research, MIT, and Sun. These people all have a great pedigree in usability. The author suggests using a 3D interface is tiring but in the movie the police are required to parse through a large amount of 4-dimensional data in very short periods of time. This is because they need to stop the crime before it occurs. That interface is built around speed and control which is not something the critic considers. I find it ironic how the author derides gestural input while Slashdot has stories almost every day about how great that interface has worked for the Wii.

  8. Re:User Interface? Minority Report. by MichaelSmith · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The author suggests using a 3D interface is tiring but in the movie the police are required to parse through a large amount of 4-dimensional data in very short periods of time.

    Most people describe the UI of the air traffic control system I work on as dull but thats because you need to give it your total attention for six hours straight without your eyes getting tired.

    Different requirements from your example, with the totally opposite outcome, but the argument that the UI has to suit the application is a good one.

  9. Almost credible... until right at the end. by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ok. It was kind of hard reading yet another person who does not understand that movies are NOT reality. But at times it was mildly amusing, and almost credible. I say almost, because right at the end of the article there is a one line sentence that made me realize the author of this piece has ZERO comprehension of the real world. Most likely because the author is too busy trying to force reality on an obviously non-reality based for of entertainment. The line was this;

    Users blame themselves when they can't use technology

    Im sorry, but having worked in IT for almost a decade now, I have yet to hear one person who blames themselves instead of the 'stupid computer'. Hell, in this society, we even call car wrecks 'accidents' because nobody has the stones to take responsibility. Yet, this guy somehow believes that people are blaming themselves that they dont know how to use a PC? The only thing I can even think comes close to this is the people who walk around using the phrase "Im computer illiterate" as some sort of badge of honor. To which I always think "If you cant take the time to educate yourself about something you know you should be trying to learn, do you think its a great idea to BRAG about it?"

    That one line in the article is more fanciful than ANY of the movie situations presented.

  10. Technical Difficulties Diversion? by yosofun · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Well... would you rather have a 2-hour extension to the original movie, wherein the actor is portrayed to "realistically" grope her way around the system while the dino-robo's are out loose?

    No, I wouldn't want to watch someone debug or "bond" with a difficult system either. I'd rather see the results.

  11. Re:This is a Unix system. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Leaving aside the plausibility of a 12-year-old knowing Unix,

    What an arrogant remark. What, 12-year-olds can't read, or something?