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My name is Wei. I am working as a PhD researcher at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands.

The aim of this blog is to create an information storage, to share my ongoing work, and to encourage discussions for Generation Y Interactions.

Now, let's start our interactions :-)

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Three Types of GUIs – past, present and the future

http://www.enterpriseirregulars.com/19624/three-types-of-guis-past-present-and-the-future/

There are three types of Graphical User Interfaces: First we had to interact with our early IT tools, as on our Apple IIs with Visicalc, then we had to face an ever increasing number of apps that made our screen into a messy desktop, and lately, the front end of process snippets on new and often smaller screens.

I’ll call them TUIs, DUIs and PUIs.

TUI, the “Tool User Interface” is the mature one. We’re now used to what we were served at first, as can be seen from the cries of protest when Microsoft moves an edit button from one place to another. Usability inevitably being measured by how easy it is to navigate by an old MS Word scribe.

In essence the TUIs’ purpose is similar to a well sorted toolbox when you go about repairing your car, or when taking apart your laptop to replace the hard drive. Sorted, “logical”, find stuff in the usual place with minimum effort and disruption to the task at hand.

It’s the UI of word processors, presentation kits, image manipulation tools, blogging interfaces and every other single task tool.

Tool

A TUI as we know it.

DUI, the “Desktop User Interface” is still not quite mature, hence the theme of a million blog posts, thousands of UI web sites, “expert consultants” and even conferences. Now it’s about making the tool cabinet full of toolboxes easy to navigate.

In essence its purpose is to take a cluttered desktop with all kinds of tools, papers and sorting boxes and making them virtual onto a single screen so you can find the right toolbox, the right files and get going with whatever task you choose with minimum effort and no confusion.

It’s the UI of multi task “systems” like CRM, HCM, ERP, personal organisers etc., and not to forget operating systems.

Now, all business is about process and multiple tasks, hence the importance of DUIs. Problem with the current crop of multi task systems is that they have little or no process built in, it’s usually a matter of do-it-yourself – hence the need for all possible and impossible options being present at all times.

Crm

A DUI with about 150 clickable “buttons”.

PUI, the “Process User Interface” – so far the area of simple OS processes like “Install new printer”; pure step by step process, but as of lately, quickly spreading in the form of iPhone (and other mobile devices) apps.

Now it becomes interesting as a process can be delivered in a different format; one step at a time, no need for all options at all times and the interfaces can be two buttons, three choices or some fields to fill in – all with a “Next” or “Submit” button on the bottom leading straight to the next interface – yours or somebody else.

Iphoneapps

Some PUIs

It changes the whole understanding of what a UI is even if some have touched upon it: Google; one logo and a simple search field in the middle of a white screen. Twitter began with a list of messages, a reply button, a message field, send. Wait for somebody else to reply. OK, not much process there, but two or three steps is still a process.

Now imagine business or enterprise apps that are process based, not single task items knit together by DIY process: An app that can pick up an idea, issue or request and run it through an unpredictable process that might look like a ball of yarn all the way to an implemented idea, a solved issue or a happy customer.

For these, forget DUIs and TUIs, think PUIs. Imagine wizardly step by step, think two choices and a submit button, think that you will get exactly the information and the choices to make, or fields to fill in at the right time, then add what the iPhone and now the iPad has done to interface thinking.

That is the future of business and enterprise apps and UIs. Bye bye to a million blog posts using the term “intuitive”, hello “just do it”.

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