Mystery meat navigation
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Mystery meat navigation (also abbreviated MMN) is a term coined and popularized by author, web designer, and usability analyst Vincent Flanders to describe user interfaces (especially in websites) in which it is inordinately difficult for users to discern the destinations of navigational hyperlinks—or, in severe cases, even to determine where the hyperlinks are. The typical form of MMN is represented by menus composed of unrevealing icons that are replaced with explicative text only when the mouse cursor hovers over them.
[edit] Etymology
Flanders adopted the epithet mystery meat because, like the unidentifiable processed meat products stereotypically served in many American public school cafeterias, MMN is unfathomable to the casual observer. Before conceiving the term mystery meat navigation, Flanders temporarily described the phenomenon as Saturnic navigation, a phrase named for the Saturn Corporation, whose website formerly served as a high-profile example of this web usability problem.
[edit] Sources
- Flanders, Vincent. "Mystery Meat Navigation." Web Pages That Suck. Flanders Enterprises.
- Flanders, Vincent. "Mystery Meat Navigation: Big Corporations and/or Classic Examples of Mystery Meat." Web Pages That Suck. Flanders Enterprises.