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Alan Cooper Quotes

Alan Cooper Quotes
1.
No matter how beautiful, no matter how cool your interface, it would be better if there were less of it.
Alan Cooper

2.
If we want users to like our software we should design it to behave like a likeable person: respectful, generous and helpful.
Alan Cooper

3.
Ironically, the thing that will likely make the least improvement in the ease of use of software-based products is new technology. There is little difference technically between a complicated, confusing program and a simple, fun, and powerful product.
Alan Cooper

4.
A powerful tool in the early stages of developing scenarios is to pretend the interface is magic. If your persona has goals and the product has magical powers to meet them, how simple could the interaction be? This kind of thinking is useful to help designers look outside the box.
Alan Cooper

5.
Design principle: Take things away until the design breaks, then put that last thing back in.
Alan Cooper

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare Donald Trump Mahatma Gandhi Barack Obama Rush Limbaugh Henry David Thoreau Friedrich Nietzsche Mark Twain Rajneesh Cassandra Clare C. S. Lewis Albert Einstein Oscar Wilde Thomas Jefferson
6.
Define what the product will do before you design how the product will do it.
Alan Cooper

7.
Form follows function straight to hell.
Alan Cooper

8.
There's only one thing you can use against pure logic, and that's common sense.
Alan Cooper

Quote Topics by Alan Cooper: Design Thinking Powerful Heart Memories Simple Simplicity Technology Beautiful Noses Rugby League Logic Musician Paper Men Use Teenager Color Father Artistic Hell Believer Example Running Principles Impossible Sanity Products Rocks Spiritual
9.
Run for your lives-the computers are invading. Awesomely powerful computers tackling ever more important tasks with awkward, old-fashioned interfaces. As these machines leak into every corner of our lives, they will annoy us, infuriate us, and even kill a few of us. In turn, we will be tempted to kill our computers, but we won't dare because we are already utterly, irreversibly dependent on these hopeful monsters that make modern life possible.
Alan Cooper

10.
Usability methods are like sandpapering a chair. If you are making a chair, the sandpaper can make it smoother. But no amount of sandpaper will turn a chair into a table.
Alan Cooper

11.
Keep it simple: In general, interfaces should use simple geometric forms, minimal contours, and a restricted color palette comprised primarily of less-saturated or neutral colors balanced with a few high contrast accent colors that emphasize important information. Typography should not vary widely in an interface.
Alan Cooper

12.
To our human minds, computers behave less like rocks and trees than they do like humans, so we unconsciously treat them like people.... In other words, humans have special instincts that tell them how to behave around other sentient beings, and as soon as any object exhibits sufficient cognitive function, those instincts kick in and we react as though we were interacting with another sentient human being.
Alan Cooper

13.
It's harder than you might think to squander millions of dollars, but a flawed software development process is a tool well suited to the job.
Alan Cooper

14.
Well madam, have you looked in the mirror and seen the state of your nose? Boxing is my excuse. What's yours?
Alan Cooper

15.
Men do not greet one another like this ... except perhaps at rugby club dinners.
Alan Cooper

16.
Computers no longer interface with humans--they interact, and the interaction will become steadily deeper, more subtle, and more crucial to our collective sanity and ultimate survival.
Alan Cooper

17.
Just how do I design if not with prototyping? An excellent question. The short answer is 'on paper.'
Alan Cooper

18.
You Don't Have to Go Home from Work Exhausted!
Alan Cooper

19.
One of the most heinous, insidious lies is the notion that you have to be an asshole to be a successful business person.
Alan Cooper

20.
It has been said that the great scientific disciplines are examples of giants standing on the shoulders of other giants. It has also been said that the software industry is an example of midgets standing on the toes of other midgets.
Alan Cooper

21.
I just try and learn to be a good husband and be a good father before I am a good rock star. That means saying no to certain things that go with the business.
Alan Cooper

22.
You can get spiritual things out of books and stories and they have nothing to do with religion.
Alan Cooper

23.
We seem to be keeping old fans and are bringing on new fans that are teenagers. I think that is amazing. When I was a teenager, that was when I fell in love with music. It affected me in a deep way. That's why I love having teenagers at our shows.
Alan Cooper

24.
While making art you should just do what is in your heart.
Alan Cooper

25.
We don't fight about music. We don't fight about artistic direction. The things like that we could fight about, we really don't. We are pretty lucky for that.
Alan Cooper

26.
I just like so many different kinds of music that I like experimenting. I don't want to keep making the same record over and over and over. I'm an 'evolve or die' kind of a musician. I think it's cool to try new things.
Alan Cooper

27.
Past dreams of bliss our lives contain, And slight the chords that still retain A heart estranged to joys again, To scenes by memory's silver chain Close-linked, and ever yet apart, That like the vine, whose tendrils young Around some fostering branch have clung, Grown with its growth, as tho' it sprung From one united heart.
Alan Cooper

28.
If you are not going to produce albums then you are not going to produce new fans. It's impossible. I'm a huge believer in putting music out as quickly as early as possible, touring hard and then working on putting the next one out. I don't need to break. I just need to put a record out.
Alan Cooper

29.
Because computers have memories, we imagine that they must be something like our human memories, but that is simply not true. Computer memories work in a manner alien to human memories. My memory lets me recognize the faces of my friends, whereas my own computer never even recognizes me. My computer's memory stores a million phone numbers with perfect accuracy, but I have to stop and think to recall my own.
Alan Cooper