Design

Screenshots



Figure 1. Login Page.


Figure 2. Home page. Users can access any page on the site by clicking the large center buttons or the smaller sidebar buttons.


Figure 3. Packages page. Users can check in/out and edit packages on this page.



Figure 4. Items page. Users can check in/out and edit lendable items on this page.


Figure 5. History page. This page contains a list of all the actions ever performed by any desk worker in chronological order.



Figure 6. Notes page. Users can leave notes for other desk workers to let them know about anomalies during the job that don't fit into the packages or items categories.

Important Design Decisions
Design Alternatives

Implementation

Describe the internals of your implementation, but keep the discussion on a high level. Discuss important design decisions you made in the implementation. Also discuss how implementation problems may have affected the usability of your interface.

Evaluation

Our test users consisted of three actual dormitory desk workers and one student who had never worked as a desk worker. Other than the student, our users were very representative of our target population as they are our target population.

Here is a link to the briefing and tasks we used in our user tests.

Usability problems found:

Reflection

Discuss what you learned over the course of the iterative design process. If you did it again, what would you do differently? Focus in this part not on the specific design decisions of your project (which you already discussed in the Design section), but instead on the meta-level decisions about your design process: your risk assessments, your decisions about what features to prototype and which prototype techniques to use, and how you evaluated the results of your observations.