As a user of several streaming services, I am often baffled by their interfaces, let alone their business models. They know what I watch yet they cannot seem to develop screens that effectively display good tv/movie options. It’s like they never do in-depth interviews or UX testing.
Also, let me remind you that we are two weeks away from…
As a user of several streaming services, I am often baffled by their interfaces, let alone their business models. They know what I watch yet they cannot seem to develop screens that effectively display good tv/movie options. It’s like they never do in-depth interviews or UX testing.
Also, let me remind you that we are two weeks away from THE MOVIE EVENT OF THE YEAR. Cocaine. Bears. Humans being stupid. Bear killing stupid people. I await your Across the Movie Aisle review of Cocaine Bear!!!!
They definitely have different UX depending on TV devices too. I have a Roku stick on one TV and the UX for Netflix is different than the UX for Netflix on my other TV (for which I use a Apple TV).
As a user of several streaming services, I am often baffled by their interfaces, let alone their business models. They know what I watch yet they cannot seem to develop screens that effectively display good tv/movie options. It’s like they never do in-depth interviews or UX testing.
Also, let me remind you that we are two weeks away from THE MOVIE EVENT OF THE YEAR. Cocaine. Bears. Humans being stupid. Bear killing stupid people. I await your Across the Movie Aisle review of Cocaine Bear!!!!
I am convinced it is because they are trying to optimize the UI for use with phones (which is opposite of what I want)
They can have different UX for different devices, which seems to befuddle them.
They definitely have different UX depending on TV devices too. I have a Roku stick on one TV and the UX for Netflix is different than the UX for Netflix on my other TV (for which I use a Apple TV).