If The Shoe Fits: Assumptions and Inflexibility
by Miki SaxonA Friday series exploring Startups and the people who make them go. Read all If the Shoe Fits posts here.
Early this year I wrote Convenience is Killing Creativity and today is a sort of follow-up to that post.
A few days ago another story popped up condemning tech’s fixation on “easy to use.”
These days, the gold standard for tech is whether or not it’s “easy to use.” (…) So easy a five-year-old could do it. That is a nice ideal.
But simplicity comes at a cost, and five-year-olds are not very smart. A simple tool is, by definition, inflexible. Software that boils everything down to one button needs to make a lot of assumptions about what the user is trying to do. If you don’t agree with those assumptions, too bad.
Too bad is right.
While the author was focused on software programs, assumptions are found everywhere.
I hate those assumptions. Windows 10 doesn’t like how I personalize my computer, so it just goes ahead and changes everything back to what some damn 25 year old thinks it should be.
And it’s not just software.
Surveys and questionnaires are terrible, especially those in healthcare.
Even multiple choice offers absolute choices, with little flexibility; how often have you seen ‘sometimes’?
The problem is that, for most of us, true answers are more nuanced.
Sure, sometimes the nuances and subtleties don’t really matter, but too often they make the difference between an accurate picture and one that is distorted, or, at the least, blurred by the creator’s bias (as opposed to one’s own).
Bottom line: tech dumbs us down with “ease of use” and everyone limits us with lack of choice.
Image credit: HikingArtist