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Comment by gruez

6 years ago

>Their research probably found people LIKED it more, not that it performed better.

This internal survey seems to suggest otherwise. It asked a range of questions, not just "do you like it?".

http://video.ch9.ms/slides/mix08/UX09_Harris.pptx slide 140

I don't understand what you gain by asking people questions about how they think usability has improved. Users are notoriously bad at actually knowing what they want. If I were testing this sort of thing I'd give them tasks to do and watch what they do, when they look frustrated etc.