That's a terrible analogy, I have to admit :-)
My point was that unexpected change is annoying, we all agree on that.
But helping people transitionning from what they know to what we wish
they knew would be a major improvement toward making people understand
the change they are being imposed.
And I'm not saying "imposed" lightly, because for most users, it's
really how it's felt.
Panos Astithas :
> So, basically, for every change ever made to the UI, someone will complain.
It's probably true for any change to anything. But the amount of
acceptance differs based on how the change is presented.
I'll try another very different analogy:
Recently, France has changed of President. Some people complain about
it. But largely, François Hollande is accepted as the new President
(even by those who complain). The reason is that the change was preceded
by a country-wide election. Having been involved in the decision of the
change, French people largely accept the new President.
However, if we learned from the news that there is a new President,
people won't accept it, because it's presented in a way that makes the
change unacceptable.
Of course, every single Firefox UI decision cannot be voted on. What
works to choose a new President in one country doesn't for a software
used by 500 million people all over the world
But there is definitely room for improvement to introduce the change in
a less intrusive way, to make it more easily accepted and not felt
imposed. From Stuart list:
"Showing images centred on a grey textured background"
The first time a user is being "imposed" this choice, a little
notification thing saying "To enable a better reability, from now on,
images and videos will be shown centered on a grey background instead of
at the top-left corner in a white background" could be prompted.
It helps the user understand that a change did happen. It's not a virus,
it's not something they have done (besides accepting the update), it's
not their fault, it's just an improvement.
A lot of people do not use computers often. They are afraid of what the
news tell them about hackers and virus. Every change may be the sign of
a threat.
What I said doesn't work for every example, but I just took 5 minutes to
come up with a solution for one case. I'll let UI/UX experts find better
solutions to make all upcoming changes more friendly.
David