Comment by bmitc
I am in this camp as well. Even worse are cute error messages.
If software actually worked, then I'd be fine with more whimsy. But it doesn't, so I'm not.
I am in this camp as well. Even worse are cute error messages.
If software actually worked, then I'd be fine with more whimsy. But it doesn't, so I'm not.
I remember when the Steam "login from a new computer" auth flow shoved a big "Hi there!" in user's faces the moment it blocked access to their entire online functionality until they left to get a code from their email and came back. Sometime later they removed it and now it's just "please look for the confirmation code sent to <address>".
I think in the push to make computing "friendlier" by dressing up error messages, past a certain point they began to come off as condescending. I wish modern UX could focus on working for me instead of trying to be my friend all the time.