The Design Of Everyday Things - Don Norman.pdf (2027)

The apartment was no longer a minimalist masterpiece. It was messy, labeled, and "cluttered." But for the first time since he moved in, Elias knew exactly how to live in it. He sat back, watched his correctly-heated stove, and realized that beauty is a poor substitute for a door that actually tells you how to open it.

In a fit of frustration, Elias grabbed a permanent marker. He drew a small arrow on the door indicating "PUSH." He taped a diagram of the burners onto the stove. He scratched a tiny 'H' and 'C' onto the chrome sphere in the bathroom. The Design of Everyday Things - Don Norman.pdf

By noon, Elias had reached his breaking point. He sat down to use his new "Universal Remote," a device so "intuitive" it replaced fifty buttons with a single touch-sensitive glass surface. He wanted to lower the blinds. He swiped up. The TV turned on at maximum volume. He swiped down to kill the noise. The fireplace ignited. The apartment was no longer a minimalist masterpiece

He retreated to the bathroom to wash his face. The faucet was a triumph of minimalism—a single, chrome sphere. He rotated it left. Cold. He rotated it right. Cold. He pulled it. Nothing. He pushed it. Nothing. He spent three minutes waving his hands under it like a desperate magician until a jet of scalding water blasted his knuckles. There was no until the pain arrived. In a fit of frustration, Elias grabbed a permanent marker