I did too (up to and including the “some value of actually,” as it played 20% of the songs 90% of the time), which is why I brought up that example. It annoyed me to no end that the button did what it said it did.
In general, interfaces should reflect what the user expects the interface to be, rather than what the designer expects the user to interpret the interface to be.
I did too (up to and including the “some value of actually,” as it played 20% of the songs 90% of the time), which is why I brought up that example. It annoyed me to no end that the button did what it said it did.
In general, interfaces should reflect what the user expects the interface to be, rather than what the designer expects the user to interpret the interface to be.
Actually, I kind-of liked its unpredictability. When I didn’t want to listen to a song for a second time (and sometimes I did), I just skipped it.