Specialist Task Force 322:
Guidelines for generic user
interface elements for 3G mobile terminals, services and applications
Who we are:
Team Leader: Bruno Von Niman
Team Members: David Lewis Williams
Matthias Schneider
Pekka Ketola
Latest news: the deliverable has been
reworked, approved and
published as ETSI Technical Report TR 102 972 (in October 2009).
Following multiple reviews during the very late phase of the development work,
on the request of some major mobile network operator and other ETSI members and
3GPP SA1 feedback, the draft ETSI Guide 202 972 deliverable has been reworked,
approved and published as ETSI Technical Report TR 102 972 (in October 2009). We
would like to thank all stakeholders involved in the work for their interest,
efforts and contributions.
The published ETSI
TR 102 972 is available here.
What we do :
We are developing an ETSI Guide (EG),
currently available as ETSI DEG 202 972, that will provide generic,
basic-level design, development and deployment-oriented guidelines applicable to the user interfaces
of 3G-enabled devices, services and applications, addressed from the end users’
perspective.
The work aims at further improving the
overall user experience of the 3G/UMTS
environment by addressing the user interfaces of its
elements,
for which basic-level guidelines are provided: terminal devices, communication services and data applications.
This work does by any means intend to
restrict the ability of market players to further improve and develop their
product offering, nor does it limit their options to trademark user interface
elements or position the user experience of their brand-specific products and
service
offering as a competitive edge.
Basic
considerations of what makes a user-interface area a candidate for generic
user-interface elements include:
- the proposed harmonization
should not present any barrier to innovation;
- it should not present an obstacle
to good product-specific user interfaces;
- only the semantics of a harmonized
user-interface element should be specified in most cases, not the actual
design and implementation;
- end user aspects, such as
learn ability, familiarity, trust, configuration, accessibility access, will
be considered;
- commercial aspects (faster uptake
of new technologies, larger user base) as well as legal requirements and
possible regulations will be taken into account.
The
focus area of DEG 202 972 expands beyond the
2G/2.5G-focused guidelines developed in broad industrial consensus,
published in 2004 (ETSI EG 202 132, “Human Factors;
User Interfaces; Guidelines for generic user interface elements for mobile
terminals and services”)
by complementing them with 3G-specific aspects. These include:
- Infrastructure and device-related guidelines:
- Managing quality of service and cost of connectivity;
- Internet access;
- Always-on, always on-line;
- Specialized UIs; and
- Related terminology, symbols and auditory signals.
- Guidelines for services, media and applications:
- Data-intensive services and applications;
- Distributed, non-device-native (local and remote) UIs;
- Customization, personalization and operator-bundled packages;
- Services of public interest (societal services/ services to the public);
- Mobile Internet access and development guidelines; and
- Related terminology, symbols and auditory signals.
- Guidelines for other (related) areas:
- Application installation and software updates;
- Computer access;
- IMS-based application guidelines;
- 3G-enabled accessibility applications;
- In-car use; and
- Related terminology, symbols and auditory signals.
The guidelines
provided in EG 202 132 remain applicable to the systems and services addressed
by the current work, as 2G technologies
are an integral part of 3G
communication networks
(as well as other wireless networks, e.g. Wi-Fi) and services currently offered.
Wherever possible, Design-for-All
approach principles are applied
in the development of the guidelines, taking the needs
and abilities of all users (including young
and older people and users with sensory and functional limitations) into
account. Furthermore, services and applications with an accessibility
applicability, enabled by 3G technologies are specifically addressed by this
work.
Ergonomic issues related to hardware
design and machine-to-machine communication interfaces are not addressed.
Read our
Terms
of Reference
Final draft DEG 202 972 version 40
has failed to achieve approval in
January 2009.
Final draft DEG 202 972 version 50
has failed to achieve approval in
April 2009.
Why we do it:
Technological advances and market pressures have made telecommunications and ICT
products and systems increasingly complex, feature rich and miniaturized.
Research results indicate that novice as well as advanced users is equally
afraid of the high complexity of new technologies.
Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) play a key role in the daily
activities of many people. The mobile telephone is a highly successful device
that also corresponds to a deep human communication urge. Available and coming
applications and services promise a world where ICT resources improve further
the quality of life.
The
capabilities offered by mobile solutions evolve
continuously, from
plain
calls and the use voice-mail to
messaging applications, personalization,
navigation, personal information management, application additions
and the introduction of multimedia
information services, quasi-cordless functionality or video call
services.
The work
is aligned with and
co-funded through the European Commission's
Initiative eEurope (2005), a
programme for inclusive deployment of new, important, consumer-oriented
technologies, opening up global access to communications and other new
broadband technologies, for all, see
http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/eeurope/2005/index_en.htm.
The
e-Europe Action Plan states that the potential of the Information Society (IS)
“…is growing due to the technological developments of broadband and multi‑platform
access”.
The Communication from the European Commission COM (2004) 061, “Connecting
Europe at high speed: recent developments in the sector of electronic
communications”, highlights the need for sustained political commitment to
improve the effective use of ICTs in the Union and identifies actions to remove
barriers to further investment: “…further deployment of new innovative services
calls for actions on facilitating deployment of the necessary infrastructure,
broadband and 3G communications”. Similar messages are carried by the EC
Universal Service Directive (2002/22/EC) and the Framework Directive (2002/21/EC).
Time plan for the work:
- March 2007:
Start of work
- June and September 2007: Early draft DEG 202 972 development and reporting to
ETSI TC Human Factors
- December 2007:
Presentation at the Mobility Conference 2007
- February 2007:
Reporting and presentation of first draft to ETSI TC Human Factors
- March 2008:
Full-day review and consensus Workshop at HFT 2008 and paper presentation
- April 2008:
Presentation and discussion at Mobile Internet 2008
- May 2008:
Presentation and Workshop at the Finnish CHI conference and the Swedish ITS
AG9 ICT Accessibility WG
- June 2008:
Presentation of stable draft to ETSI TC Human Factors and to the W3C Mobile
Web Best Practices WG
- September 2008:
Presentation at Mobile HCI 2008, ITU-T Telecom 2008 and the ACM Mobility
Conference 2008 (including a dedicated, special session)
- September 22, 2008: Draft DEG 202 972 available
for review
- October 2008:
Final draft DEG 202 972 presented to ETSI TC Human Factors
- November 2008 - January 2009: Presentation to the UMTS Forum, the Nordic Forum for
Telecom Accessibility and eAsia Mobile Services
- December 2008
– March 2009: ETSI TB approval, ETSI Membership Vote Approval and
publication of ETSI EG 202 972
- Project closure in March 2009
How to contact us:
If you would like more information, please contact the STF
Leader
through email (bruno@vonniman.com)
or mobile phone (+46 733 66 1234).
Note: this information is based upon STF working assumptions.
The views expressed do not necessarily represent the position of ETSI in this
context.