I like how Google Chrome handled this. Historically developers could control the text on JavaScript popups; obviously some people were abusing this to confuse users. Very early in Chrome's development they decided to label the buttons "Leave this page" and "Stay on the current page" - regardless of what code says.
14 Responses
Pro
Rovane Durso
I saw this floating around on twitter and decided to do a version for fun. Does this confuse the hell out of you or is it just me?
about 1 month ago
Pro
Adam Roberts
Haha, this is some baaad UX! :P
about 1 month ago
Pro
Liang Shi
Do you want to cancel the cancel, or cancel?
about 1 month ago
Pro
Rovane Durso
@Adam Roberts right?
about 1 month ago
Pro
Rovane Durso
@Liang Shi based on this, I don't really know what I want :)
about 1 month ago
This is when I smash my keyboard against my face.
about 1 month ago
@____@
about 1 month ago
Pro
Jacob Roman
I have seen this too, its so bad, and confusing.
about 1 month ago
The colour scheme makes it even worse. (what's orange supposed to mean?)
Nice design though :)
about 1 month ago
Pro
Pieter Goris
Now that's what you can call a very very bad user experience :)
about 1 month ago
Confusion!!!
about 1 month ago
Pro
Avinash Tripathi
ok it does helps though to retain users for a longer time.. scratching their heads and wondering if the screen doesn't explode on any click now! LOL
about 1 month ago
I like how Google Chrome handled this. Historically developers could control the text on JavaScript popups; obviously some people were abusing this to confuse users. Very early in Chrome's development they decided to label the buttons "Leave this page" and "Stay on the current page" - regardless of what code says.
about 1 month ago
Pro
BOLD
wow, where do you get the color combos from! amazing :)
about 1 month ago