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April 14, 2006

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Comments

Maybe it is just a matter of taste, the picture of Trumba looks awful to me - that set up would make it hard for me to keep up with my schedule. The google calendar simplicity actually makes things easy for me, and each calendar can be given its own color. Maybe you did not notice that you can set up multiple calendars with different colors. Plus, it does not seem from your picture that Trumba has a customizable view. Google has that which is great for me.

I concur with "or" above. I tested Google Calendar today and while it may look simplistic, it's full of rich interface features that you usually get in a desktop application. Being familiar with Apple's iCal, I grasped how to use it intuitively. I was pleasantly surprised, even delighted. The design is where it should be - in the interface functionality, not in "looking" functional.

Or and AJ, It's probably an unfair comparison. The Trumba calendar is loaded with entries. I do think Google Calendar is simple. And that's good. I just wish it was elegant. Thanks, Grant

It's almost as if you are talking about decoration, not design. Perhaps like the Scion tC, it's just not designed for you?

The first thing I read about the Google Calendar was http://google.weblogsinc.com/2006/04/13/google-calendar-staying-organized-has-never-been-so-easy/ and it really emphasized the feeling aspect of the interaction (one version of "design" in an interesting way)
"This thing is gorgeous, easy, flawless during my initial poking, lubricated with Web 2.0 juice, and brain-dead simple to use."
"The site is clickalicious, springing to life with each mouse bite. In fact -- perhaps the page's responsiveness is somewhat oversensitive, but that's Web 2.0 for ya."

Steve, please tell me you are not confusing elegance and decoration. Elegance is built right in, no? Thanks, Grant

I'm sorry, but I've looked and looked on this page and I can't find any reference to Trumba except in the comments. Where is this picture of Trumba?

John, sorry, I had an image from Trumba (and a passage about Trumba) in the original post, but Pam, my wife, was not keen on having the former made public. So now I have a "trace" problem. Oh, well. Sorry. Best, Grant

I've tried out Google Calendar, and it seems just fine to me. I don't think I'll switch over from iCal, but I can see why people are so interested. What exactly would you have liked to see at Google Calendar to make it more elegant?

Your writing is so good that it makes me believe you're right without my ever even looking at Google Calendar. That's sort of scary (Ha!) What engineers need to learn is that design is functionality, but the best design is functionality jiggered with a whisper of vermouth and a twist of lemon: Ah, now that IS better.

I'm also of the opinion GC is a clean simple elegant design. Goes well with the Google suite (Finance's graphs are above par design).

This is how Google Design disappoints? These things aren't critiques. 'Designers' confuse me.

==
1) we live our lives in the wind tunnel of contemporary culture. Data howls past us. We are Floridians in a data storm.

2) people need us to take information and make decisions. Preferably by lunch time. Certainly by the end of the business day.

3) most of us are always 2 or 3 data points away from chaos. ("That roof's about to go. Get in the basement!")
==

Jon, thanks for your comment, good design is not about prettifying software. It's about making it easier to fathom, faster to use, and, ultimately, allowing it to make my life, especially the shifting temporal details thereof, more lucid. See Virginia Postrel's The Substance of Style for more. Best, Grant

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