I may be slow, but I don’t see the issue.
If that’s pull the knob up for off, and it’s on the floor, it seems to make sense. Accidentally hitting it would keep the fuel flowing.
Or am I missing something.
at a glance, in need, you're going to see the word 'ON' or 'OFF' and flip the switch the wrong way
You mean like in my Ford Escape, I move the lever down to switch the wipers on or increase their speed, whereas in my wife’s Ford Escape, the lever goes up to switch the wipers on or increase their speed?In the automobile world, another classic switch design faux pas is the wiper control. Especially when you rent an unfamiliar vehicle at the airport.
- Where is it located? On the center console, dash, or steering column stalk?
- Is it on the left side or the right side?
- Do you twist something, push something, pull something?
- And the errors involved.... wanted wipers but instead engaged cruise control, honked horn, extinguished headlights, etc.
In the plane I flew in the Air Force, on the yoke there was a rocker switch that controlled radio/interphone transmissions. Pressing on the upper half of the switch would transmit to the crew on interphone and the bottom half would transmit on the radio.You mean like in my Ford Escape, I move the lever down to switch the wipers on or increase their speed, whereas in my wife’s Ford Escape, the lever goes up to switch the wipers on or increase their speed?
It’s probably a military vs civilian spec thing...the overhead panel in one of the airplanes I fly reverses the switch operation from military to civilian. On the military version, forward is on, aft is off. On the civilian version, up is on, down is off. Civilian “up” is military “aft”.In the plane I flew in the Air Force, on the yoke there was a rocker switch that controlled radio/interphone transmissions. Pressing on the upper half of the switch would transmit to the crew on interphone and the bottom half would transmit on the radio.
The plane I fly now has the function reversed. Upper half for radio and bottom half for interphone. The planes are both Boeings, so at some point, there was a conscious decision made to switch the function of the switch. Why? I don't know. I've mostly gotten used to it, but sometimes if I'm in a hurry trying to do a couple things at once, I'll revert to primacy and talk using the wrong half of the switch. It's annoying.
I used to be in a volunteer firefighter, both industrial at work and municipal at home. I lived and breathed it.
All of the pumper trucks I used to work with had vernier throttle control at the pump panel. You twist out counter-clockwise to increase the rpm which increases the pump speed which increases the water pressure. If you need to kill rpm in a hurry you push the center knob in.
Fast forward to my first hours of flight training 15 years later. When things got hectic in the cockpit, primacy took over. I would push on the throttle to reduce power and pull to increase it. Stupid plane!
Some of the devs at our company like coding up things with weird a double negatives
They'll have a radio button for
"Disable background check requirement"
instead of
"Require background check"
In the actual airplane there is absolutely zero chance of getting this wrong or misinterpreting anything about it. That’s the fuel valve in an RV-12. You push the ball down (as shown in the picture) for ON, and pull it straight up about two inches for OFF. Just like the label says. There is no fore/aft movement.at a glance, in need, you're going to see the word 'ON' or 'OFF' and flip the switch the wrong way
In the actual airplane there is absolutely zero chance of getting this wrong or misinterpreting anything about it. That’s the fuel valve in an RV-12. You push the ball down (as shown in the picture) for ON, and pull it straight up about two inches for OFF. Just like the label says. There is no fore/aft movement.
It’s certainly not a “UI fail”. Sorry to disappoint.
Sot it's Push/On and Pull/Off like throttle, mixture, carb heat ( ), ... ?In the actual airplane there is absolutely zero chance of getting this wrong or misinterpreting anything about it. That’s the fuel valve in an RV-12. You push the ball down (as shown in the picture) for ON, and pull it straight up about two inches for OFF. Just like the label says. There is no fore/aft movement.
It’s certainly not a “UI fail”. Sorry to disappoint.
Most pilots can jump in a tractor and use a front end loader or back hoe quickly with little training as the controls make sense...
Its a push/pull switch. If you're able to flip it in any direction, you've got bigger problems to worry about than how someone choose to word that label.at a glance, in need, you're going to see the word 'ON' or 'OFF' and flip the switch the wrong way
In the actual airplane there is absolutely zero chance of getting this wrong or misinterpreting anything about it. That’s the fuel valve in an RV-12. You push the ball down (as shown in the picture) for ON, and pull it straight up about two inches for OFF. Just like the label says. There is no fore/aft movement.
It’s certainly not a “UI fail”. Sorry to disappoint.
It’s certainly not a “UI fail”. Sorry to disappoint.
So it's a UI fail fail.In the actual airplane there is absolutely zero chance of getting this wrong or misinterpreting anything about it. That’s the fuel valve in an RV-12. You push the ball down (as shown in the picture) for ON, and pull it straight up about two inches for OFF. Just like the label says. There is no fore/aft movement.
It’s certainly not a “UI fail”. Sorry to disappoint.
There was a cool video posted by "smarter every day" relating to this and how "it's like riding a bike" is actually not that trueDevelopers can only think in "default" and "why would you want this configurable"
UI is something we will never master as it is different person to person, industry to industry, and culture to culture. Having said that, I spend a lot of time in UI discussions and generally enjoy it as it makes you think about all the wacky things people will do with whatever you create.
Some of the devs at our company like coding up things with weird a double negatives
They'll have a radio button for
"Disable background check requirement"
instead of
"Require background check"
There was a cool video posted by "smarter every day" relating to this and how "it's like riding a bike" is actually not that true
He taught himself to ride a bike with a "reverse" handle bar.. it took him 8 months of daily practice.. after which he couldn't ride a normal bike again. His kid on the other hand, was able to pick both up much more easily
and he is humble, and just seems genuinely interested and curious about the stuff he makes videos about..He makes very neat stuff and relates it well.
The part about his kid speaks a lot to how much more malleable we are when we are young. Its similar to learning a second language as a child, it makes other languages even easier as you don't think of language as linearly or as having only one set of rules.
Oh it definitely is.. having to make choices generally gives people anxiety so they tend to just leave the default selections alone..As a career software engineer, I find that frightening.
After using something like this in a hotel, I'm adding one of these in my bathroom remodel. I'm just not entirely sure the buttons are intuitive enough. Push on and it pops out, push again and it turns off but then you can also turn the outside to adjust the flow. On the plus side I never have any guests so it probably won't matter.The UI fails that bug me the most are faucets and showers.
The original design with one knob marked with a red “H” and the other with a blue “C” was close to the ideal in clarity and simplicity. Now, getting into a shower at a motel can devolve into an IQ test where the penalty for getting it wrong can mean getting scalded. GRRRRRR!
Its a push/pull switch. If you're able to flip it in any direction, you've got bigger problems to worry about than how someone choose to word that label.
I see it says "38" - I assume that's Celsius.. does this thing actually digitally modulate a set temperature for the water?After using something like this in a hotel, I'm adding one of these in my bathroom remodel. I'm just not entirely sure the buttons are intuitive enough. Push on and it pops out, push again and it turns off but then you can also turn the outside to adjust the flow. On the plus side I never have any guests so it probably won't matter.
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I honestly hate how "smart" cars have gotten. If I want it hotter or more air I should not have to click through three different menu options in order to do thisThe most annoying one currently is the differences between car shift levers...