Continue Discussion 29 replies
July 2006

Daniel_Read

Bob wrote:

“Yeah, but birth control? Is that really SO necessary while hiking?”

Rest assured that I agree the whole Dr. Bronner package ranting it totally whacked. I’m not a fan of castile soap anyway, so I don’t like what’s inside either. That said, I’ve heard that hook-ups are not that uncommon on the Appalachian Trail. :slight_smile:

Dan

July 2006

hgs

There seems to be something akin to “lean” thinking here, aiming for maximum information flow, but there is still the constraint of usability, as per Donald Norman’s ideas on design. Too much information puts people off, results in mistakes, etc. Also highly dense displays are unlikely to be accessible to visually impaired people or those with low-res displays (mobile phones, web browsing
by speech/audio, etc). I don’t think density is the key. I think matching the display to people’s cognitive processing is. Pie charts beat tables for proportion comparisons. Graphs are better for trends.

July 2006

ICR211

I would agree that displaying as much information on the screen is a good way to go if you don’t have too much conflicting and different information to convey.
As with any debate, things tend to go to the extreme, each side using the extreme of the other to argue their point. “Your website has a million and one things and is confusing to navigate. Thus we should go minimalistic”. When in reality, it only tends to be confusing if the million and one things are unrelated, and the interface is trying to do everything at once.

July 2006

DavidA

I think there is a difference between a busy interface and a dense interface. I think the latter implies that it is filled with relevant, useful information. While the former implies a lot of noise (graphics, ads, icons, etc.) To me, Yahoo is busy.

But I think there is something missing from the discussion: sure, a page in a phonebook has a high density of relevant information, but its a very specific purpose for a very specific type of media. You certainly wouldn’t expect to port a phonebook to the web as just a series of pages to click through. The web interface would use search and show relevant results, albeit with less density than a printed page.

Comparing computer screens to printed media is only applicable (IMO) when the computer representation is static (Word, PDF, scan, image). When you are talking about an interactive application, the rules of the game are different.

July 2006

Joe

I think Steve Krug of /Don’t Make Me Think/ fame answered this question for me: it doesn’t matter how much is on the main page, so long as users can find what they are looking for quickly. I believe he even cites some usability testing he did where they saw that users only really scan and thus only really see the thing they are looking for.

Usability has to be the king here. If users can’t access the information we’re trying to provide – no matter the desnsity of the offered data – then it’s like the data is not even there.

July 2006

John_Radke

A phone book page can hold 36K of information, but how much of that is USEFUL to the reader? I’d say about 7-100 bytes (depends if you’re looking for a phone number or an address). So we’ve got this book full of probably billions of bytes of information, only 100 of which are useful to the reader at a given moment. Compare that to a search engine where I can type the name of the store (or the type of store), and scroll through maybe 5000 bytes for the 100 I need. The phone book is progress compared to that?

July 2006

DavidD

Tufte is the classic example of somebody’s who too smart by a half (i. e., he’s smart, but not smart enough). What he fails to grasp is that not everybody is like him. Where he see “Beautiful Evidence” many other see confusion. They simply can’t deal with the data density he finds so illuminating.

With whom are you trying to communicate? Yale academics? Then go for the density. Or are you trying to reach out to people who can’t keep multiple mental balls in the air at one time? Then go for simple and direct.

July 2006

Luke

A phone book has a dense data representation out of necessity. You simply have to put as much information on a page as possible because you are limited by the physical format of the book. The page has a fixed size, and a total number of pages that is fesible to use.

How do you search a book? You quickly fan the pages till you get to the section with the letter you want. Then you flip pages till you get to theright one. Than you put your finger on the page, and scroll down till you find the information you want.

Compare this to Google interface where you get the information in two steps. You type in a query, scroll down the results list.

The information density on a web page might be lower, but the speed at which the information arrives is much higher.

There is no need to put allot of information on a search page because most people only stay on that page as long as it takes them to type in a query.

Is it desirable to have your user fishing for information on your page? For example, I routinely use Firefox’s incremental search feature to find the details I want when I encounter a page that overwhelms me. What I’m doing is taking your high density page, and extracting information I want.

Sometimes this might be a desirable setup. If you are presenting statistical data, or some kind of compilation, it might be logical to put it all in one place and let the users fish.

But I definitely do not want to use my browsers search feature to find the news section on your page or hunt for the illusive download link.

July 2006

Daniel

I’d have to say Tufte’s just wrong. I’ve seen several of these text-only-cram-it-in sites, and they make it harder to find stuff. Like everything, there’s a balance, but subtle visual cues and good use of negative space get the user to their data quicker every time. The problem is these solutions get ‘bottled’ so quickly, then re-used without thinking about their application.

Digg is a good example- tons of content, but enough space and color to get an idea of what’s going on instantly. But witness the crop of copy-cat sites trying to apply the concept and failing, either because implementation is poor, or because the whole concept doesn’t apply in their situation.

July 2006

CraigR

Well i think there is a fine balance between content and the interface to that content.

It all starts with knowing who your end user is.

Know them, be friend them, and learn how to continually improve how you deliver what they want, that you have.

If your a organic soap buyer, so obviously their design/interface is not gonna be aimed at you.

But yet design can’t be too unusal, that it detracts new customers from using it.

So it’s a balance. But so much of this feel of balance is just instinct, intuition, it’s hard to put factual basics into it.

I believe in informational architecture, how the page is structured, easy to read, easy to find what i need to find or want to find.

If i can’t find it, easy access to help or support.

The only reason to make it difficult is if that is part of the allure, like orkut, hidden or hard to get access to.

That can be fun at the start, but in the end if the users can’t figure out how to get hte products/services they want in an easy enough way, your competitor will easily snap them up.

July 2006

Shawn_C

This really seems like the “age-old” fight between print designers and web designers.

A phonebook is a static medium where the only interaction between the “user” and the medium is the flipping of pages and the reading of text.
The phonebook entries are sorted and categorized so it is easy to find the information your are looking for. A phonebook is easy because it’s entire contents are (usually) in one large volume, right in front of you.

Thumbing through a phonebook is a LOT faster than clicking, clicking, clicking, clicking through multiple pages of information on a web site. Can you imagine if you had a database of a phone book and then just dumped it’s entire contents to someone’s browser, forcing the user to scroll, scroll, scroll page after page, trying to duplicate the functionality of your thumb on a book?

When you have an interactive site, where information is contained in a database or on some other site, you need to have a more sophisticated way of searching for and retrieving data.

So Tufte doesn’t like navigation bars, but wants choices. Choices of what? Navigational aids are nice because:

  1. If a user is “scanning” text on a page, they will know pretty quickly if what they are looking at is what they want.

  2. Why force them to continue to read or scan to look for navigation to take them somewhere else?

  3. If you have well thought-out and executed navigational aids, a user can use that navigation to help find their information much quicker.

July 2006

Foxyshadis

I think a lot of people are missing the fact that Jeff is basically musing out loud and not advocating it; all the comments are preaching to the choir of anyone who would read this.

Shawn: The Do Not Call list does exactly that, opens up a text file with every number on the list in an area code. . (They eventually added a searchable interface, but never bothered to point it out.)

July 2006

Shawn_C

Foxyshadis

Yeah, I know. But I am sometime like the Dennis Miller of development and I go off on rants sometimes.

I just dont “get” people that don’t “get” that the web/your monitor is a different medium than a newspaper or a book. Trying to force a web site to read like printed material is like the whole “square peg in a round hole” idea.

Keep making the square peg small enough, and it will eventually fit through, but it’s not exactly satisfying.

July 2006

BuggyF

David Ogilvy (sp??) of Ogilvy and Mather, advertisers extraordinare, published widely on this 50 years ago for a couple of decades. He concluded, and research at the time confirmed, that the more you told the viewer the more successful the ad was. Same idea.

We reactionaries argue that pixel glitz doesn’t add any kind of density, save noise.

The main point about use: either support all input from the mouse, or not at all. It’s the flipping back and forth that makes people crazy.

July 2006

Daniel_Read

I’ve always wondered whether the amount of text on the Dr. Bronner’s soap package is based on an awareness that the product is very popular with backpackers/hikers, particularly on the Appalachian Trail in the U.S.

Hikers use this stuff for everything–soap, tooth paste, dish washing, deoderant–because they only have to carry one product. (I tried brushing my teeth with it once and just about lost my hiker’s breakfast.) Hikers have lots of time to sit around reading.

It also reminds me of the religious rantings you see in “folk art” such as that from Howard Finster.

Dan

July 2006

Bob

Yeah, but birth control? Is that really SO necessary while hiking?

July 2006

Fernando

Over the time ,the people are giving up to the evident: the data density will must match the data we can process. Leave the upper density to the machines, they can handle it, but they cannot understand it. At last, we are talking about better comunication from interface to people…

July 2006

Des_Traynor

Minimalist content certainly sucks, and it is definitely a capstone of the web 2.0 movement. Sometimes however people mistake the amount of content for the density of content.
Just cause someone is using 400 words, doesn’t mean they are providing any information. I’d much rather read “Upload your photos here, free, for life”, than …

“We are a web based image application processing firm from Ohio. Using our compementary combination of bleeding edge web technologies, you can upload any graphical data you see fit, in compressed or uncompressed form, and we will endeavour to ensure that your data remains intact for a duration that we see fit.”

It’s basically about saying everything that must be said, as succinctly as possible.

July 2006

IanL

I attended Tufte’s course in Washington D.C. last year. I found it to be an excellent course in presentating information and overview of his printed material. It was a truly enlightening experience for me, a web developer.

He specifically addressed digital displays and their inability to match print in terms of resolution. He asserted that digital displays are a long way off from matching print resolution. However, he noted that digital displays typically allow for interaction. He suggested providing summary data that can be summarized and then drilled into or zoomed into in order to reveal more precision. Also, he suggested that non-web interfaces (mission control, etc.) require multiple display units (see http://research.microsoft.com/displayArticle.aspx?id=433 ). The best of both world’s would be interactive digital display with print-like resolution or print with interaction, but until those options exist, we need to make design decisions appropriately.

A lot of people like to bash Tufte without reading his material or attending his courses. They don’t realize that the majority of the examples he cites are printed and span the course of history. It’s critical to really understand his material before critiquing it.

July 2006

Buck_Pyland

When I first looked at the Dr. Bronner’s label, I thought, “I wonder if Gene Ray was using this stuff when he made up his Time Cube diatribe?”. Go to Gene’s website, www.timecube.com, for more “info” on “Nature’s Harmonic Simultaneous 4-Day Time Cube”.

July 2006

mattbg

It has to be combined with good zoom functionality. If it had that, this type of interface would work well. But, most of today’s interfaces aren’t navigable via zooming. It’s all paged and context-driven.

If you had a 36000 page phone book presented densely on a single page, it’d be easy to find what you wanted via browsing if you had access to tools that facilitated whipping across and around the image and zooming in and out quickly to inspect the detail.

July 2006

Xepol

I love when people claim a product isn’t animal tested just because it is so old, no one alive remembers the tests. Chances are, far enough back, someone tormented animals, or even slaves to ensure the product was safe. Centuries later, we get all warm and gushy because we don’t know the details, and frankly, don’t WANT to know.

That is ONE massively pointless wrapper though. I understand why cereal boxes have lots of writing, but are you really going to read the bottle/box/dispensor of soap as you use it? I kinda doubt it. I suppose if you forget a magazine it might be handy tho.

Say, aren’t you commiting a hideous copyright violation by posting a scan of their product packaging?

August 2006

paul25

I have to say that this is a pretty stupid arguement. Everything about it is relative. I mean, think about it. If there was someone who was looking to find as much about this guys soap as he possibly could, of course he would want to have something like you see above. It doesnt make any sense whatsoever in another situation. I mean, how often do you go online with those intentions. For instance; if someone wanted to find a specific fact about that soap, or just anything in specific, a table of contents or something like that corresponding to a library-like webpage would be much more effective, regardless of the efficiency.

What I’m not understanding are the benefits of having a page like that other than having all of the info right in front of you, even that which you dont have any use of.

September 2006

MorganW

Tufte is wrong. Period. There are two goals of visual display interface:

  1. To present all the information.
  2. To acheive maximum information consumption.

The first is limited on one end by MAX density (the most words / pixels possible) BUT on the other end by amount of display available.

1-1000 paper pages describes all the printed letters and books to 99.9999% of the universe.

With that limit in place, density at least might be a forced good - the author / publisher can’t afford more atomic costly pages, and he can’t achieve greater word economy - then and only then do you study Tuftes method from cramming in an organized fashion.

But when the amount of display avialble approaches infinity - he’s just being snobbish and dumb.

Add-in the use of technological advances towards KNOWING and PREDICTION… and he’s not worth the display in front of our eyes.

People don’t LIKE to read. They might believe it is good, but like eating vegan food - there has to be an unobvious END beyond the immediate notion of ease and comfort. Chocolate and TV are easy. They are also both powerful.

I’m right - because in the real world, no can even hint that reading is better than TV for serving BOTH functions above. Because reading sucks and people hate it.

No one can pretend that feeding users the “exact right thing next” doesn’t blow the doors off, “here it all is - hope you’re as smart as Einstein!”

Because YES - we must provide all the info Einstein would demand - but KNOWLEDGE is meant to be easier for the next smartest guy to learn BECAUSE of Einstein. And the next and so on…

It is actually pathetic and so un-romantic for the dumb old to try and eat the smart young - the old are over, all thats left is the pattern they build into the future for adaptation.

Tufte is selling a dying breed into an exclusive club of “remember when” that admires themselves while they die.

August 2008

GilbertM

I kinda thought that the purpose of communication was to impart something (knowledge, emotions, transcendence, etc.) from one consciousness to another.

How you do it (highly verbal/information density or highly visual/information density or highly olfactory/…) is dependent on two things: 1) what tools you have to communicate with, and 2) the intended audience–flashing graphics may have as little effect to a blind audience as shouting would to a deaf audience.

It’s interesting that nobody’s mentioned that background can impart as much information as foreground. Whitespace can help transform singular points of data into patterns that convey information with lower boundaries of perception and shorten the distance between sender and potential receiver(s).

I guess it’s as simple as remembering your message and your intended audience–regardless of the medium the message is being transmitted through. Of course that presumes that both you and your audience share enough commonality (an information-dense presentation in Etruscan is less likely to be understood than a simple line drawing).

December 2008

ygulu

you suck lOSER u have no good info bitch

February 2010

Aaron_G

My take on it:

Content/Information Density = Good
Interface/Task Density = Bad

If I’m simply looking for information, then when I find it, I want to receive as much of it as possible.

However, if I’m just trying to get something done, I don’t want to be bothered by 50 buttons that do things I’m not interested it.

I don’t mind scanning (skimmimg?) information, but I really hate having to scan an interface, and I think that’s true for most people. The rules for content-based websites are different from those for Web Applications, be they “Web 2.0” or “Old School”.

This is why I think the MS Office guys are really onto something with the ribbons. Context-sensitive tasks. Don’t bother the users with things they don’t want to do, and instead leave as much room as possible for the actual information (the document). Now all they need to do is extend the Direct UI, as is (sort of) done in Visual Studio, Refactor Pro, etc.

February 2010

nelsonr

Very interesting!A dyzzying mix of occasionary striking prose and logical coherence.

December 2015

James_Briggs

Yes I think that this is a very important topic especially because of the up coming presidential election. I came here because I am preparing an article on the terrible communication style of Democrats. Perhaps they just want to be polite but their political statements have such a low information density as to make it appear that they are lying. It seems that like Bronner their style of communication is meant to serve as a way of identifying themselves as members of a certain in-group. I love Bronner’s labels but they are not statements of fact. They a used to identify Bronner as a person who has an interest in ancient texts. I love his soap and trust his product because he is my kind of person. As for the Democrats they often make true statements but do it in a style that alienates about ninety percent of the electorate.