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Provide visual indicators for common problems #7
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Below is a mockup of what the first intersection edit screen could look like. Notes:
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p.s. attributions: Arrow (skip button) designed by P.J. Onori from The Noun Project Save designed by Cris Dobbins from The Noun Project Cancel designed by John Chapman from The Noun Project Eraser designed by factor[e] design initiative from The Noun Project Base mobile screen from http://developer.android.com/design/downloads/index.html And the typeface is 'Cityof'. |
Incorporated feedback from a friend. "This ramp" vs "All" was confusing.
I've also made the exit icon more standard (an 'x'). When the user exits, they'd be given the option to save or not save. Messing around further (below), "the rest" becomes "entire intersection", I've added a notes button, changed "exit" to "done", and made various other changes. |
One last go at this.
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I've updated both screen designs. Katie suggested adding something to make the water stand out more (which I've tried to do, below, while using only black and gray). I've also:
I've changed the text at the top in the design shown below (first line shows specific area ("NE Halsey and NE 9th"), while second line shows what you're crossing. In the intersection indicator to the right of the second line of text, I've added an "N" to indicate which part of the intersection is North. There is now also an arrow that helps highlight which corner we're working on. You should be able to read the intersection indicator and see that you're on the NE corner, surveying the curb cut headed South.
I have no idea. It may not even be possible, but I thought I'd see if others thought it'd be worth looking into. One issue I have with the current aerial view from Bing(?) is that it isn't close enough to see the curb ramps. In an ideal world, the data input (or verification) could be done remotely in places where streetview is good enough.
The design below has additional space between the two, is back to saying "this ramp" (does that seem sufficient?), and skip is relabeled as 'next' (perhaps synonymous but more commonly understood button). Thanks for reviewing this, Katie. |
Still liking the icons, and willing to take most as they are. Steep Icon. Lip Icon Water Icon Cracked Icon No Pad, Bad Pad, Black Pad. Blocked Icon Orientation Aids/Streetview/Aerial photos/North I like the challenge of using a streetview, even if I think it would be difficult and maybe not useful. I suspect that people will expect to have a streetview option. I like the more complicated intersection icon and would like to try it. I did misread the crossing arrow as a north arrow. I wonder if I would have understood that it indicated crossing direction if it were gray instead of black. There is an arrow on the left, pointing up and to the right. What for? Pretty slick to have the Intersection level call-outs inherit the quality of the current ramp. ("All So-So", All None, All Good) And do the values not increase in goodness as the slider goes from left to right? |
Thanks for the thorough review!
I was exploring ways we might show the North direction within the street view (where, in this case, the street goes North as it leaves up and to the right). Perhaps adding 'N' and placing the arrow closer or within the street view photo would help.
When you slide from So-So to Good, the "All So-So" would change to "All Good". One reviewer felt she needed examples of what a blocked curb ramp would be. If you have any, that might help me come up with a better blocked icon. |
Thanks! Do you have any examples where the sidewalk is blocked only for
Given the examples above, wouldn't the "no pedestrian crossing" be |
Hi Peter, This is almost a total block for a person in a wheelchair. I have seen [image: Inline image 1] So, I would not call this a no pedestrian crossing. In fact I crossed here -K On Thu, Aug 22, 2013 at 1:54 PM, Peter W [email protected] wrote:
Katie Urey |
Perfect! Thanks. |
If we're collecting info about drainage, blocked ramps, steep ramps, etc, we may want to provide some visual explanations or icons for that. This may help the user understand what the terminology means (what does a "lip" look like, for instance), and may help experienced users quickly find the issues to report ("recognizing an image is easier than reading text (Norman, 1990)" --The design, understanding, and usage of pictograms).
Some good illustrations of issues wheelchair users face:
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/environment/bicycle_pedestrian/publications/sidewalk2/sidewalks207.cfm
Quick draft of related pictograms:
I'm interested in feedback on both the general idea and the pictograms above. Thanks.
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