Creator of the World-Wide Web, Tim Berners-Lee, has expressed that this movement towards user participation was always part of his initial concept (Berners-Lee, 2009).
During the first few years of the millennium, the Web 2.0 movement began a tidal wave of changes in the design of user interfaces. Many prominent web designers have spent time over the past decade, walking in the shoes of the user, to underline the key ingredients that create effective sites.
User-Interface (UI) design has reached a turning point, as designers are ever increasing their awareness of user expectations and how human computer interaction occurs. Steve Krug shortens it down to the best one-line description with the title of his book – “Don’t make me think!” Krug’s statement synopsizes the ideas behind ever-evolving face of UI designs.
Today’s web users simply want less question marks and head scratching during their experience. Emerging from this change are new trends resulting in more user-friendly, simplistic designs. Behind the scenes, designers are working overtime to keep it that way
(Krug, 2000).
This essay will delve into the importance of user-centric interface design and the trends that have emerged and grown over the past decade since the Web 2.0 movement began.
“At the beginning of the millennium, the Web had over 80 million users, and has profoundly changed the way we do business, exchange ideas, and socialize with one another” (Berners-Lee, 2000).
At this point in history, though the majority of the world’s population did not yet understand how to browse the Web, it had already made monumental impacts on society (Berners-Lee,
2000). Since these changes began, the expectations of the Web’s users have evolved as their knowledge of the internet has spread (Berners-Lee, 2000).
Users will now rapidly lose confidence in a site if they are unable to find the information they need quickly. This is
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