The Psychology of Everyday Things
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First Sentence
""You would need an engineering degree from MIT to work this," someone once told me, shaking his head in puzzlement over his brand new digital watch."
257 pages
~4h 17min to read
Description
The Design of Everyday Things is a best-selling book by cognitive scientist and usability engineer Donald Norman about how design serves as the communication between object and user, and how to optimize that conduit of communication in order to make the experience of using the object pleasurable. One of the main premises of the book is that although people are often keen to blame themselves when objects appear to malfunction, it is not the fault of the user but rather the lack of intuitive guidance that should be present in the design.
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