[IxDA Discuss] (no subject)

Robert Hoekman, Jr. rhoekmanjr at gmail.com
Wed Jan 24 16:44:24 PST 2007


"Exactly. Not unless you're designing a toilet. And even then... ;-)"
"Even telephones (and the systems behind them) aren't designed for
everyone."

You're debating semantics.

Clearly, the "everyone" in "we're designing for everyone" does not really
refer to "everyone". It refers to something more like, "a very broad range
of users, some of which are likely to be the exact opposite of each other,
who have internet connections, and are willing to do X, Y, and Z on the
web." Even the stakeholders realize that.

"Everyone" is a lot easier to say. Rolls off the tongue, you know?

So, yes, it is *very* possible to be tasked with designing a product that is
for "everyone". And it is *very* possible to succeed.

Cars, televisions, streets, water fountains - I could go on. Heck, I work
for a domain registrar - it's a prime example. These are all designed for
"everyone" within certain criteria. People can differ wildly and still fit
cleanly into a set of criteria.

-r-



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