NotSkilledHere wrote: ↑Mon Mar 10, 2025 9:26 am
Someone on their end needs to get a UI and user experience person to look over things and sit them down to realign all the features and where they are placed
Yeah, but that's like designing and building a better barn door long after the horses have all escaped. And once the code is written (and not particularly well tested), changing that at a later stage is hideously burdensome and expensive -- so, quite simply, they don't.
The correct approach has been known now for decades, well documented beginning at least with the early books by Alan Cooper such as "About Face: The Essentials of Interaction Design" and " "The Inmates Are Running the Asylum: Why High Tech Products Drive Us Crazy and How to Restore the Sanity" -- and similar approaches by others. Everyone knows how to do it right -- upper management just doesn't want to (generally for short-sighted cost management reasons). But anyhow ...
I've used a bunch of apps (going back into the 90s) for online instruction and meeting settings. The very very best has been Webex -- but you have to really pay to play in that league. Otherwise I (and everyone else in my immediate family) have also used Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, Zoom, and several others. They're all slightly different fish in the same pond in terms of usability. And our family has shifted from one to another as one or another of our children has changed jobs (IBM, SAS, Truist, Amazon, some start-ups, Discovery Channel, Marsh, ...). We're currently using Google Meet (having switched a couple of years ago from Zoom -- which used to drive me nuts on regular occasions). I expected better. Silly me. Well, it works -- mostly. Except half the time when we're having a family conference call and I bring it up and use my webcam with it, my picture is all goobled (Googled?) up. I finally figured out how to quickly fix it, but it's at least somewhat humorous that Google Meet -- from my point of view and experience -- doesn't function exactly flawlessly on a Chromebook.

Still, it's "useable" -- in one weak sense of that word.

Take your pick and take your chance.
