The problem I see is that people don’t read these messages. They assume that it is an
error or something.
I think the text above (some different from a feedback message) is more effective, and the
extra field (username) helps on the differentiation. It could be plain text instead of an
input.
I don’t believe this solution will solve the problem.
Gabriel
On May 21, 2014, at 4:37 AM, Stian Thorgersen <stian(a)redhat.com> wrote:
I added it the way you said, and to me it doesn't stand out at
all. How about moving the notification bubble we already have to be in-line with the form?
That would also make all other notifications, such as invalid username/password stand out
more as well. See attached screenshot for how that would look like.
Adding a disabled input field for username doesn't make sense at all to me. An input
field is not informative, it's an input field and hence something users expect to fill
in.
----- Original Message -----
> From: "Gabriel Cardoso" <gcardoso(a)redhat.com>
> To: "Stian Thorgersen" <stian(a)redhat.com>
> Cc: "Bill Burke" <bburke(a)redhat.com>, keycloak-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
> Sent: Tuesday, 20 May, 2014 7:11:20 PM
> Subject: Re: [keycloak-dev] Issues with the first login flow
>
>> He's not logged-in, those are actions that the user are required to do
>> prior to be logged-in. The user will however have to identify himself with
>> username/password (and totp if configured) prior to being permitted to do
>> those actions. The actions a user can be asked to do as part of a login is
>> not just limited to updating the password. These can include:
>>
>> * Configure TOTO
>> * Update password
>> * Verify email
>> * Update profile
>>
>> And, possible more to come in the future.
>
> Thanks for the clarification.
>
>> Text above we already have in a notification thing, but I don't have a
>> problem with moving that above the form. The username input field doesn't
>> make sense at all, as the user is not able to change that at this stage.
>
> Cool, so please put the text inside a <p class=“form-info”></p>.
>
> The username field is to differentiate more this page from the login page (3
> fields are different than 2 :) I don’t see it as a problem, it is
> informative and the user can’t change it (no danger). So now it is up to
> you.
>
> Thanks,
> Gabriel
>
>>
>>>
>>> Gabriel
>>>
>>> ---
>>> Gabriel Cardoso
>>> User Experience Designer @ Red Hat
>
> ---
> Gabriel Cardoso
> User Experience Designer @ Red Hat
>
<login-notification.png>
---
Gabriel Cardoso
User Experience Designer @ Red Hat