> For things that you do regularly the button should be optimized to not be in the middle of a cluster
I found that I was using the wheel warmer button way more than I through I would. It's located right in middle of a cluster on the central console, in an awkward place to look at (right next to my hips in a blind spot).
I devised a nice and cheap fix for this UI problem that wouldn't be applicable on a touch screen: I put a googly eye sticker on it.
Better tactile feedback, no loss of function, and more whimsy in my otherwise boring car.
I'm glad that by using and defining the word "predisabled", I have raised your consciousness enough to consider your own mortality, and the fact that your vision, hearing, dexterity, mental acuity, and memory are all inevitably going to degrade as you get older.
Not everyone is predisabled: many unfortunate people won't live long enough to suffer the consequences of old age.
But I'd rather not die before I get old, myself.
Do you know anyone currently alive who isn't pre-dead?
I certainly hope I'm currently predisabled instead of just short lived, myself.
It sounds like you're the one who needs a counselor if you're so depressed and having such a hard time facing the fact that you're getting older and less abled every second, until you die.
If you're designing user interfaces, you might want to seek out help from an accessibility specialist.
I found that I was using the wheel warmer button way more than I through I would. It's located right in middle of a cluster on the central console, in an awkward place to look at (right next to my hips in a blind spot).
I devised a nice and cheap fix for this UI problem that wouldn't be applicable on a touch screen: I put a googly eye sticker on it.
Better tactile feedback, no loss of function, and more whimsy in my otherwise boring car.