Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 5th Mar 2008 21:02 UTC, submitted by irbis
Graphics, User Interfaces "Most software packages employ progress bars to visualize the status of an ongoing process. Users rely on progress bars to verify that an operation is proceeding successfully and to estimate its completion time. Typically, a linear function is applied such that the advancement of a progress bar is directly proportional to the amount of work that has been completed. However, estimating progress can be difficult for complex or multi-stage processes. Varying disk, memory, processor, bandwidth and other factors complicate this further. Consequently, progress bars often exhibit non-linear behaviors, such as acceleration, deceleration, and pauses. Furthermore, humans do not perceive the passage of time in a linear way. This, coupled with the irregular behavior of progress bars, produces a highly variable perception of how long it takes progress bars to complete. An understanding of which behaviors perceptually shorten or lengthen process duration can be used to engineer a progress bar that appears faster, even though the actual duration remains unchanged. This paper describes an experiment that sought to identify patterns in user perception of progress bar behavior."
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RE: All very nice, but
by segedunum on Wed 5th Mar 2008 21:47 UTC in reply to "All very nice, but"
segedunum
Member since:
2005-07-06

You beat me to it. The biggest, and most annoying, example of this is the Windows MSI installer. It progress bar is no reflection at all on how the install is progressing, and it insists on going back to the beginning several times. The net effect of this is that a user simply doesn't believe it at all, and finds it annoying that it seems to be deliberately trying to mislead.

I don't believe this is the correct article, because the link I'm getting is to do with Vista SP1.

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