![]() ![]() ![]() In one case, the colors for the male and female selection options in a personal info form are reversed compared to expectations: the white-backgrounded one is the selection, while the blue-highlighted one is the one you're not picking-and there's no non-binary option, either, of course. The resulting website is a gauntlet of nearly impossible-to-parse interactions that are as funny as they are infuriating. But what happens if we poke all good practice with a stick and stir it up? What if we don't respect our self-created rules and expectations and do everything the other way around? Rather than looking at a UI, users tend to act instinctively and take 90% of an interface for granted. ![]() Over the past decennium, users have grown accustomed to certain design patterns: positions, colors, icons. Sometimes we take Web and user interface design for granted-that's the point of User Inyerface, a hilariously and deliberately difficult-to-use website created to show just how much we rely on past habits and design conventions to interact with the Web and our digital devices. ![]()
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