DIY
Items on list: 10
Items completed so far: 7 (plus a couple of extras)

So for once, I’m almost ahead. I’m off the rest of the week and should finish up my to-do list tomorrow. This is unheard of in my chequered DIY history. So far no catastrophes, and I’ve only sworn once.

AND I’ve managed to order a couple more Xmas pressies online.

BUT my new PC isn’t expected until around the 13th of the month. Which happens to be a Friday. So I’ll be getting a new PC on Friday the 13th. Great. Doomed from the start.

bookmark_borderR.T.F.M.

If you work in I.T. you will no doubt have heard the abbreviation R.T.F.M. at some point. It stands for “Read The Frickin’ Manual”. As a Technical Communicator by trade it is always disappointing to hear it uttered. Hours and hours of research, learning and knowledge accumulation are pored into most software manuals, and all too frequently they are ignored.

“No-one reads the manual”?

So why do we bother? Like most professionals we take great pride in our work. We try and ensure that the information we present is technically accurate, written properly (frequently writing to ensure an easy translation is possible) and most importantly, of use to you the end user. So why don’t people use product documentation?

The advent of online help has moved the information you need into the product, so it’s only ever a button click away. Yet still it doesn’t get used. So what next? Microsoft tried to move things forward with the aforementioned Clippit. What was the customer reaction to Clippit? Well, new users loved it, but experienced users hated it. We now have applications that are led by the online help, stepping you through a task with additional information where needed.
So why doesn’t product documentation get used? Well, ask yourself this: if you experience a problem while using an application, what do you do? You ask someone else, or you search the web maybe, hoping to find a user forum, or possibly something on the company website that may help? Or do you just continue on within the application, hoping to solve your problem via trial and error? For the record I’ll plead guilty to all of the above.

Ultimately product documentation, of any form, presented in any manner, is never going to be well received. After all no-one likes to admit that they don’t know something and turning to the product documentation is an admission of failure. Factor in most people’s experience with poorly written product documentation from a few years back at the start of the PC boom and you have a recipe for, well, empathy I guess.

Most software companies have at least one technical author. That technical communicator spends many many hours thinking about you. Analyzing what you might need, creating user profiles, and trying to figure out how best they can help you. How best to structure the information they are producing and whether it is the correct kind, and in the right order and a multitude of other factors that are discussed at length every time two technical communicators get together.

So I have a plea: Next time you find yourself stuck, or if you experience a problem with your software, check the documentation first, and if you don’t find what you want, let the company know. Somewhere in that company is a technical communicator who is crying out to receive some valid feedback, something concrete they can use to improve their product documentation.

Those technical communicators are constantly striving to improve what they and their company offer, both in the documentation and as user advocates within the development cycle. Go on, throw them a bone.

Suggested Reading : What is a Technical Communicator? – http://stc.org/answers.asp

bookmark_borderStill sore

Doctor’s appointment on Friday, probably be off work next week as I still can’t put any weight on my right foot/ankle.

I am using the time constructively to hack through the pile of unread books I have, and staying away from the PC as much as I can (mainly because it is upstairs, and crawling upstairs really isn’t any fun..)

Change your desktop
I’ll happily admit to being a bit of a desktop wallpaper collector, and I do also dabble in creating skins for applications. Anyhoo, if you need to get some unusual desktops for your PC I highly recommend you visit mandolux.
As the site itself says: “Mandolux is the number one website for high-end aerospace, paper money, and art desktops on the Internet.” (arguable but possibly true).

bookmark_borderI know a man

Our car insurance is due and I’ve been checking out some online quotes. There are loads of sites that “will find you the cheapest quote” and I’ve tried most in the last couple of hours. Be it a one-stop site, or the majority of the better known insurers, they all share one thing (seemingly). Badly designed forms.

Point 1: A common feature is the ‘let’s be clever and help the user fill out the form’. So, you enter the make of car (Renault) and suddenly the screen pauses, the mouse cursor changes to ‘busy’ as they dive to a database to pull up a list of cars for you. Now granted this is helpful. But not on a 56k modem where it takes so long you begin to wonder if your PC has died.

Point 2: If I specify the second driver as my spouse, why are you prompting me for her marital status?

Point 3: Well kinda the same as Point 1 really. I am an organised kinda guy. I have all the details I will need already in front of me, I know the date we bought the car, the renewal premium, the average mileage for the last two years, etc etc. So why can’t I just zip through the form and then let it go off and process the details for me? Why do I have to wait 30 secs between each of 3 or 4 screens whilst the information is processed.

I’ve yet to receive a decent quote so I’m still looking. In the midst of all this I remembered that I hadn’t reviewed our AA breakdown coverage (and as we are off to the Lake District next weekend we might need it). So I fired up a second browser window (yes I know it will slow my connection even more), and hit the AA website. First thing I saw was their online insurance quote service. What the hell, I thought. I’ll try this one as well.

Delight! (No, not a cheaper quote) A well designed form! Fast, responsive, smart pre-selections made for you (presumably the most common answers to questions like – have you ever been convicted of a driving offense), and split into two logical sections.

Well done The AA.

Now if only you’d found me a cheaper quote… *sigh*

bookmark_borderCustomise your PC

I never realised there were so many options available for altering and tinkering with your PC hardware. You could say this kind of thing is a bit geeky. And you’d be correct. But I have to admit the geek in me is saying “Whoooaaaa, COOL!” (in a surf-dude stylee).

Plenty of information to be found at “MetkuMods – Because you love your hardware.”