Five HCI students recently submitted entries to Mozilla's University Design Challenge. The object of the challenge was to address browsing history: “How can we make sense of this rich source of data and how do we best present this data to the user?”
After an initial brainstorming session, the students worked individually or in teams to create mockups, prototypes and concept videos. Mozilla has blogged about the design challenge results, and some of the Mozilla Labs team will be giving our students personalized feedback over the phone next week. Check out the Design Challenge submissions from SI:
Natalia Fisher - Snapshot History
Natalia's Snapshot History allows users to visually scan and search for specific words or phrases in their browser history by displaying searchable thumbnail screenshots and a time frame selector. Check out her mockups.
Instead of showing web history as a one dimensional list, Tom's Timeline includes additional contextual information (like time of day, duration of visit, browsing path to the page, whether pages were opened in a new tab or a new window, etc) to help people re-find the pages they were looking for. See his mockup and video.
Katie McCurdy and Kiran Jagadeesh - Firefox Foresight
Firefox Foresight uses past user browsing behavior and patterns in order to predict which websites they are likely to visit at a given time, and in a given place. The system will make suggestions to users via a sidebar notification and recommendation system. Check out Katie and Kiran's concept description and narrated storyboard.
Jose Jimenez - Mozilla's History Browsing
Jose's timeline helps users remember which sites they have visited by providing a sliding timeline at the top that can be used to navigate back and forth. Users will visually see the sites they have been to and be able to see the path in the which they got to any given site. See Jose's concept description and prototype.


















