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Silvia's blog

Vquence at Webjam

Posted in Digital Media, vquence by silvia on the September 29th, 2007

Tonight is Webjam night in Sydney and I have custom created a Vquence for this occasion on my favorite band right now: “My Chemical Romance”. I’ll be presenting in a slide show how to go about getting it to here:

Am looking forward to getting to know other Web 2.0 players in Sydney!

Usability testing for Web2.0 sites

Posted in vquence by silvia on the September 11th, 2007

Let’s say: you run a Web2.0 site. And you know it’s not perfect (no website is perfect – people just make do with what’s there). And you are actually determined to improve it. Who do you ask?

No: I am not asking you to send me a quote – go away! I don’t want to spend thousands of dollars on a professional agency to undertake usability testing and get some cool new designs for the interface and processes. Chances are I find out later that this apparently “perfect” solution makes processes too complex or uses the wrong colours for our audience or … well, it’s wrong again in some aspect. Our Web 2.0 site is targeted at teenagers and I predict that no agency out there can give me the right feedback – simply because they are corporate.

The solution is very simple indeed – and it will make for a few very happy teenagers – happy to be able to have input into a new online site and to tell their friends about it. All you need to do is ask a few intelligent and outspoken teenagers for a bit of time and invite them to your office or home for a few hours to do some semi-formal usability testing. You shall be amazed about the results!

I’d like to say special thanks to Charlotte, Will, Peter and Alice for taking the time on Friday for 3 hours to do a thorough usability testing exercise with us at Vquence. It was a lot of fun – and I dare say: for everyone involved. Here is the schedule that we followed.

We started with an introductory 30 min where everybody, including the testers, introduced themselves and we started talking about what we do online, what we love and what we hate – including the testers. This is important because you break down the barriers and create trust.

Then we had a questionnaire for them to fill in (the middle part of the schedule). It took them through the functionality of the site in a logical manner, asking for feedback on the design, the processes, the functionality and the usefulness of the site.

Then we got together again to “vent” all of that frustration. And … boy, did we get feedback! It was totally awesome – the positive feedback actually made us value our previous work a lot higher – and the negative feedback was great because it tells us what to fix or improve. They were quite direct in their criticism and had some great ideas for improvements. Since they know their world and what makes them and their friends click, they are really the only ones who can tell you what is great and what sucks.

Once we fix all the things that we’ve been told, we should probably do another round of testing – with some new teenage blood. But for now, I am extremely happy with the feedback we got – and will need to look for further investment to get all of this great feedback rolled out! ;-)

Thanks guys!!

Wordpress bug? (was: Usability testing for Web2.0 sites)

Posted in Open Source by silvia on the September 9th, 2007

Or .. why does password-protection suck in Wordpress.

I wrote this entry and wanted to get feedback from the people that it was about, before publicly posting it. So I thought – wordpress has this great feature of password-protecting posts. Let me use that! But then the problems started: the post was actually added to my RSS feed and sucked in by a few planets and people started complaining that they were not able to read it. Well, it’s great to get feedback from the community that my posts are actually being read. But it sucks that wordpress handles password-protected post in such a bad manner. Is it something I did wrong or is that indeed a bug in wordpress? Leave me a comment!

LCA Multimedia Miniconf

Posted in FOMS, LCA, Open Source by silvia on the September 8th, 2007

The organisers of LCA have found another slot for a miniconf and ours is it! Yay!! We shall have an audio/video miniconf at LCA! This is particularly important since we will bring to Australia a large number of key open media application developers for FOMS. These guys will also be able to provide deep insight and understanding during talks provided to the more general LCA audience. Expect some awesome media talks at LCA!!

FOMS 2008 support by Mozilla Foundation

Posted in Digital Media, FOMS, LCA, Open Source by silvia on the September 8th, 2007

It is awesome to see FOMS – the Open Media Software developer workshop we ran for the first time this year – turning into a major audio and video developer event for Linux. FOMS 2008 will be in Mel8ourne in January and will focus on audio on Linux (in particular libsydneyaudio) and on native Firefox support for Ogg Theora (in particular liboggplay). Because of the latter, FOMS has attracted sponsorship by the Mozilla Foundation. This sponsorship is very welcome since most of the relevant developers come from overseas and are not part of large organisations that could afford to pay the expense. Check out the current list of participants on the site – it will be another milestone event for open media! And … thanks Mozilla Foundation!