World Usability Day

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

World Usability Day or "Make Things Easier Day[1]" promotes the value of usability engineering, user-centered design, and every user's responsibility to ask for things that work better. It was first celebrated on November 3rd, 2005. It is sponsored by the Usability Professionals' Association, a group dedicated to "those who promote and advance the development of usable products, reaching out to people who act as advocates for usability and the user experience."

In 2005, events were held around the world by many different organizations and groups of individuals. Some of the highlights:

  • 36 hours of events
  • 115 events around the world
  • 35 countries involved
  • Approximately 8,000 people attended events world-wide
  • 200 online participants from 16 countries

The 2006 date for World Usability Day is November 14, 2006. More information on the 2006 event is at this page.

There are many opportunities for volunteering for or taking part in World Usability Day. More information about volunteering or participating can be found at this page on the World Usability Day site.

[edit] Notes and references

Find more information on France by searching Wikipedia's sister projects
 Dictionary definitions from Wiktionary
 Textbooks from Wikibooks
 Quotations from Wikiquote
 Source texts from Wikisource
 Images and media from Commons
 News stories from Wikinews
 Learning resources from Wikiversity
  1. ^ Tim Bedore (2006-11-14). How about Make Things Easier Day? (HTML/audio). American Public Media's Marketplace (radio program). Retrieved on December 27, 2006. “Today is World Usability Day, a day to promote intuitive engineering and user-friendly design. Commentator and humorist Tim Bedore is all for it, if only we could come up with a better name . . .”

[edit] External links