https://uxdesign.cc/the-worst-volume-control-ui-in-the-world-60713dc86950 Get started Open in app UX Collective Sign in Get started Follow 410K Followers * Editors' picksReceive our newsletter Publish a story About Get started Open in app The worst volume control UI in the world Fabricio Teixeira Fabricio Teixeira Jun 15, 2017*4 min read A group of bored developers and designers has decided to start a thread on reddit to figure out who can come up with the worst volume control interface in the world: reddit.com: search results - volume r/ProgrammerHumor: Dedicated to humor and jokes relating to programmers and programming. www.reddit.com Yep. That super simple volume control UI we interact with several times a day. How can we make it extremely complicated? [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] [1] See the full post (and more examples) on reddit: reddit.com: search results - volume r/ProgrammerHumor: Dedicated to humor and jokes relating to programmers and programming. www.reddit.com [1] [1] About "wants", "cans", "needs", and "shoulds" The original reddit post has now hundreds of examples of terrible volume UI, and it keeps growing -- a fun exercise/joke, that can strengthen one's creative muscles and ability to think outside of the box. People have been participating simply for the fun of coming up with the most absurd and weird interactions and interface elements. But there's definitely a reflection point about the state our industry here. I'm sure a lot of people reading this has, at some point in their careers, felt that urge of innovating no matter what. An uncontrollable desire of redesigning something that hasn't been redesigned for too long. It has to be recreated. And it has to be innovative. Right? That's where the wants, cans, needs, and shoulds story comes in. * Everybody wants to innovate. The design industry keeps nudging us to be creative, innovative, and to deliver design solutions that have never been thought of before. Pressure is on us. We are bombarded with messages telling us that, in order to be considered a solid designer, we have to innovate at any cost. * A lot of people can innovate. I definitely can redesign the volume control UI. All it takes is a bit of creativity and moderate design skills. Prototyping tools are becoming increasingly accessible, as well as other technologies that allow to bring to fruition whatever idea comes to mind. A few hours in front of Principle or Framer lets you create an extremely refined prototype of the interaction you are envisioning. You can also decide to create an app/site/chatbot to solve that same issue. You can. * No one needs to. Let's be honest: the volume control design pattern has been around for decades, works pretty well for the majority of users, and is incredibly familiar to a lot of people. You don't need to reinvent it. But then there's the should. Should I redesign the volume control UI? Should is interesting because of its subjectiveness. It's a question that only makes sense to be asked in first person. And you have to know about much more than just design to be able to answer it -- you have to understand about business, technology, culture, people. Answering the should question is a skill you only get after many, many years answering questions alike. We can try to quantify or measure the should, which makes sense some of the time. But part of it is, and will ever be, intuition. How is yours? Read next: The case study factory Is the formulaic approach to case studies endangering young designers' capacity for critical thinking? essays.uxdesign.cc Fabricio Teixeira Designer at Work & Co, Founder of UX Collective -- http://twitter.com/ fabriciot Follow 24K 56 24K 24K 56 * UX * Design * Interaction Design * Usability * User Experience More from UX Collective Follow We believe designers are thinkers as much as they are makers. Curated stories on UX, Visual & Product Design. 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