Don't make me think

(Source Template)


reviews/dont_make_me_think.xml

    <?xml version="1.0"?>
    
    <page title="Don't make me think" keywords="">
    
    <item>
      <p>Author: Steve Krug</p>
      <p>ISBN: <isbn>0-7897-2310-7</isbn></p>
      <p>Publisher: New Riders (<small><a href="http://www.it-minds.com">web</a></small>)</p>
      <p>Reviewed by: Simon Wistow</p>
    </item><item>
    <p>
    Every so often you read a book and say to yourself "$God Damn! That's a 
    good book!" and then you go around talking to people and at every 
    opportunity you reccomend that book to them. Even when it's a book 
    about, say, usability (in this case) and you're having a conversation 
    about, I dunno. Cheese. Or something.
    </p><p>
    These people that you're talking to fall into two categories. The first 
    are people who've already read the book and say "$God Damn! You're 
    right! It was a good book! I was just going to reccomend it to you!". 
    The second group of people are those that read the book to shut you up 
    and then come back and say "$God Damn! That book *was* good! I'm now 
    going to reccomend it to everybody I know!" and then you look smug.
    </p><p>
    This is one of those books. It's by a guy named Steve. The last three 
    books that have made me feel this way have all been by guys called 
    Steve. It's a conspiracy I tell you but it still means I'm looking 
    forward to Steven Guttenberg's autobiography if only to see if it makes 
    any reference to the Stonecutters.
    </p><p>
    Anyway, back to Mr Krug's book. What can I say? Well, beyond the 
    hyperbole (not that I'm prone to that, oh no) it rocks. It's funny, it's 
    thorough, it has nice big pictures and it's chewable and bath proof. Ok, 
    maybe not the bath proof/chewable thing but it is good. Essentially 
    'all' it is is a guide to making web sites usable. Reading through it, 
    looking at the examples and his efforts at redesigning sites to make 
    them better you wind up with a red forehead from slapping it so much and 
    saying "Doh! Of course ...". As he says, right at the start, usability 
    ain't rocket surgery it's just applied common sense. But then 
    programming is just loops, ones and zeros.
    </p><p>
    What the book *doesn't* set out to do is provide you with a a recipe for 
    building perfect web pages every time. Neither, according to the typical 
    good humoured 'Not present at the time of photo' section, does it 
    discuss business models, predict the future of the web or bad mouth 
    poorly designed sites.
    </p><p>
    What it does do instead is step by step lead you through how you should 
    think about usability with respect to building web sites, what steps you 
    should take at what times, the process of doing user interviews, tips, 
    tricks, does, don'ts. And at every step you keep thinking 'God. Yes. I 
    must remember that'.
    </p><p>
    I recently reviewed 'Information Architecture and the World Wide Web' by 
    Louis Rosenfeld and Peter Morville. Whilst on paper that was a good book 
    (and of course it's about a different subject) compared to this book it 
    was lacking a certain something. Of course if I could pin my finger on 
    exactly what that was then I'd either be a professional book reviewer or 
    raking it in as an author, raconteur and bon viveur, flitting from party 
    to party wowing people with my wit and verve. But I'm not. I'm a coder 
    and therefore I'm unlikely to end up in a random book of quotations of 
    the kind that clever people keep on their shelves so that they have 
    ammunition in their own witty conversations and that everybody else buys 
    as a last minute generic Christmas present for somebody else.
    </p><p>
    As programmers, you should buy this book. By knowing about usability and 
    understanding some of the concepts you can only improve yourself. Plus 
    it'll make it easier to speak to the designery types by speaking their 
    'lingo' and making with the 'jive' designery talk so they'll think 
    you're a 'hep cat'. 
    </p><p>
    You should also, if at all possible give this to any managers, project
    managers, financial people, secretaries (since they're invariably
    sleeping with at least one person in senior management anyway) and even
    think about buying a free copy for clients because after reading this
    book (and they will read it, it's suprisingly entertaining, I hesitate
    to use the phrase 'page turner' but that surprise ending really caught
    me by, err, surprise and the plot was excellently paced) they will 
    understand. They will see the light! They will be saved! And no longer 
    will they question spending budget on hiring a usability expert when 
    that money could be better spent schmoozing more of their odious kin at 
    some crap bar somewhere. 
    </p><p>
    In short, buy this book. At twenty quid (from Amazon.co.uk anyway) it 
    might seem a little pricey for what seems like a slim volume filled with 
    diagrams but trust me, it's worth it.
    </p>
    
    	</item>
    </page>
    
    

reviews/dont_make_me_think.xml

    <?xml version="1.0"?>
    
    <page title="Don't make me think" keywords="">
    
    <item>
      <p>Author: Steve Krug</p>
      <p>ISBN: <isbn>0-7897-2310-7</isbn></p>
      <p>Publisher: New Riders (<small><a href="http://www.it-minds.com">web</a></small>)</p>
      <p>Reviewed by: Simon Wistow</p>
    </item><item>
    <p>
    Every so often you read a book and say to yourself "$God Damn! That's a 
    good book!" and then you go around talking to people and at every 
    opportunity you reccomend that book to them. Even when it's a book 
    about, say, usability (in this case) and you're having a conversation 
    about, I dunno. Cheese. Or something.
    </p><p>
    These people that you're talking to fall into two categories. The first 
    are people who've already read the book and say "$God Damn! You're 
    right! It was a good book! I was just going to reccomend it to you!". 
    The second group of people are those that read the book to shut you up 
    and then come back and say "$God Damn! That book *was* good! I'm now 
    going to reccomend it to everybody I know!" and then you look smug.
    </p><p>
    This is one of those books. It's by a guy named Steve. The last three 
    books that have made me feel this way have all been by guys called 
    Steve. It's a conspiracy I tell you but it still means I'm looking 
    forward to Steven Guttenberg's autobiography if only to see if it makes 
    any reference to the Stonecutters.
    </p><p>
    Anyway, back to Mr Krug's book. What can I say? Well, beyond the 
    hyperbole (not that I'm prone to that, oh no) it rocks. It's funny, it's 
    thorough, it has nice big pictures and it's chewable and bath proof. Ok, 
    maybe not the bath proof/chewable thing but it is good. Essentially 
    'all' it is is a guide to making web sites usable. Reading through it, 
    looking at the examples and his efforts at redesigning sites to make 
    them better you wind up with a red forehead from slapping it so much and 
    saying "Doh! Of course ...". As he says, right at the start, usability 
    ain't rocket surgery it's just applied common sense. But then 
    programming is just loops, ones and zeros.
    </p><p>
    What the book *doesn't* set out to do is provide you with a a recipe for 
    building perfect web pages every time. Neither, according to the typical 
    good humoured 'Not present at the time of photo' section, does it 
    discuss business models, predict the future of the web or bad mouth 
    poorly designed sites.
    </p><p>
    What it does do instead is step by step lead you through how you should 
    think about usability with respect to building web sites, what steps you 
    should take at what times, the process of doing user interviews, tips, 
    tricks, does, don'ts. And at every step you keep thinking 'God. Yes. I 
    must remember that'.
    </p><p>
    I recently reviewed 'Information Architecture and the World Wide Web' by 
    Louis Rosenfeld and Peter Morville. Whilst on paper that was a good book 
    (and of course it's about a different subject) compared to this book it 
    was lacking a certain something. Of course if I could pin my finger on 
    exactly what that was then I'd either be a professional book reviewer or 
    raking it in as an author, raconteur and bon viveur, flitting from party 
    to party wowing people with my wit and verve. But I'm not. I'm a coder 
    and therefore I'm unlikely to end up in a random book of quotations of 
    the kind that clever people keep on their shelves so that they have 
    ammunition in their own witty conversations and that everybody else buys 
    as a last minute generic Christmas present for somebody else.
    </p><p>
    As programmers, you should buy this book. By knowing about usability and 
    understanding some of the concepts you can only improve yourself. Plus 
    it'll make it easier to speak to the designery types by speaking their 
    'lingo' and making with the 'jive' designery talk so they'll think 
    you're a 'hep cat'. 
    </p><p>
    You should also, if at all possible give this to any managers, project
    managers, financial people, secretaries (since they're invariably
    sleeping with at least one person in senior management anyway) and even
    think about buying a free copy for clients because after reading this
    book (and they will read it, it's suprisingly entertaining, I hesitate
    to use the phrase 'page turner' but that surprise ending really caught
    me by, err, surprise and the plot was excellently paced) they will 
    understand. They will see the light! They will be saved! And no longer 
    will they question spending budget on hiring a usability expert when 
    that money could be better spent schmoozing more of their odious kin at 
    some crap bar somewhere. 
    </p><p>
    In short, buy this book. At twenty quid (from Amazon.co.uk anyway) it 
    might seem a little pricey for what seems like a slim volume filled with 
    diagrams but trust me, it's worth it.
    </p>
    
    	</item>
    </page>