An interesting story out of Microsoft Research. From an
internal alias, but OK'ed for public consumption:
Microsoft Research
When Words Collide: Organizing Your
E-mail Inbox (feel
free to share this message with your customers!)
The daily flood of e-mail messages
is like a baby's cry — insistent but mysterious. You genuinely want to understand
the meaning, but you can't always grasp the language.
Gina
Venolia
>>, a user interface engineer with Microsoft Research, wants to make it easy
for you to understand even the most complex conversations. She's designed an e-mail
interface that focuses on conversations instead of messages, putting what's most important
about communication first - the people. >
"I like slogans," says Venolia.
"And for quite a while my slogan was, "It's about people!" Venolia says that she thought
about this a lot after producing a batch of applications that were supposed to be
about communication, but just created more layers of intricacy for the user to decipher.
Then, about five years ago she
attended an all-day meeting. Doodling on a paper napkin, she came up with a list of
all the different ways she could send information digitally: e-mail, attached documents,
instant messages, shared files, FTP, Web sites, the telephone. "I ended up with over
a dozen things. And each one of them had its own tool and its own quirks. I thought,
'something is wrong here'," said Venolia.
To find some answers, she started
observing and surveying people to learn about their e-mail habits. What emerged was
some organizing principles about how to communicate digitally. She discovered that
people focus on conversations instead of a single message. She also found out that
digital conversations aren't as ephemeral as spoken conversations. People often want
to preserve them or turn them into action items.
As a result, she designed an innovative
interface, code-named Grand Central, which organizes messages into conversations,
and allows people to easily store and retrieve conversations.
Focus On Conversations
Current e-mail tools are like
looking at a conversation with a magnifying glass. It's easy to see the details but
difficult to get an overall picture. In Venolia's interface you view conversations
as a whole instead of as individual messages. The initial message is shown at the
top, and the most recent reply at the bottom, followed by the text box to input your
response, similar to a chat format:
The Grand Central Conversation Interface
She found out that about half
the time you use e-mail, it's a no-brainer. Someone sends you a message, you reply,
they reply back, and it's done. But if there's nine people on the 'to' line, and each
one is throwing his or her hat into the conversational ring -- making decisions, offering
suggestions, providing links to back up their story, or jumping in to IM you -- it
becomes harder to understand who is saying what to whom. In Venolia's interface you
can see what a message is a reply to by looking at the heavy black lines that join
the messages
Finding an email conversation
weeks or months after you've finished it can be maddening. You might look for it under
a person's name, but maybe that person isn't someone who you do business with regularly,
so you don't quite remember the name. Or you could look for it by date - but if it
was months ago, that could be a problem, especially if you aren't sure whether it
was March or May or June. There are multiple ways to remember facts and information.
So why shouldn't you be able to store and retrieve it in multiple ways? Venolia's
interface allows you find conversations by date, person and other attributes or to
label your conversations using keywords of your own.
Conversation Clues
In
a conversation where a message gets multiple replies, a simple chronological view
of the messages isn't enough to convey the relationships between the replies. For
example, if a message gets two replies, and each of those two got a single reply,
your conversation would now have branches. Grand Central handles these relationships
by showing lines along the left edges of the messages. You can see at a glance how
many branches a conversation has. To help you follow just one person's views - say
your boss or the company guru -- Grand Central uses colored lines to connect replies
from the same person.
It doesn't stop here. Venolia
has also designed the user interface to give you some metrics about your conversations
- you can find out at-a-glance just who you communicate with the most, and whether
you are the originator, recipient or a participant. You can also see a complete list
of the attachments, URLS, and images that are found in all your messages, in case
you don't want to hunt through past e-mails to find that one document or Web site
reference that you want.
Grand Central is designed to help
people keep track of conversations as they're happening, easily integrate different
digital communication methods, turn a conversation into a follow-up task, and find
and reference past conversations and the digital information that comes with them.
Her innovative concepts show future
promise for a medium that has become our number one communication tool. "My goal is
to make things better for people who use e-mail, which is just about everyone. E-mail
overload is everywhere. People can spend over an hour and a half on e-mail a day.
And it's not just knowledge workers — it's everyone. Grand Central is just a
picture of how it could be made easier in the future," said Venolia.