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[Design Ideas] Air Canada, Bloomtools, Google Maps

March 14th, 2008  |  Tags: , , ,

Good design: Air Canada search form

We benchmarked several flight reservation systems over the last few years and AirCanada.com’s search form is truly one of the most usable.

Air Canada: Airport suggestion
(Typing “FRA” in the airport input field)

Their airport input field displays tips on focus, validates errors in real-time and, what we really like about it, suggests airports, cities, provinces, states and countries containing the 3 first characters entered. This is great contingency design helping Air Canada reduce user frustration and wasted efforts/expectations.

Bad design: Bloomtools Newsletter signup

Bloomtools is an Australian Web design company we stumpled upon. Although their site is beautiful, we must be among the few visitors to have noticed (quite accidentally) their newsletter signup form.
Bloomtools: Newsletter Signup

Not only does it look more like a graphical element than a form, it is also populated with custom-font field labels and not included in the tabbing order.Making sometime look good should not be at the expense of making something usable. Users have already learned what a form looks like, why not take advantage of that knowledge?

Interesting design: Google Maps modifying itineraries

We find interesting the drag and drop option from the Google Maps interface.
Google Maps: Modifying itineraries
(After looking up an itinerary)

Although first-time users might not even notice it, this type of interaction would have been very difficult to achieve with typical Web interaction. Pushing the boundaries sometimes creates good results!


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