Pamela,
I agree his book is great, my website has a link to his and there are some other good articles there too. It's just funny that he was one of the architects of the VB4/5 interface that absolutely drove me nuts the few times I actually started VB, with windows scattered everywhere and you couldn't get rid of them all at once the.
>These are exactly the issues that Alan Cooper discusses at length in his book.
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>I hope I did not offend you. I tend to be somewhat of an evangelist on user interfaces. I worked for a rather large software development company that saw users as the enemy. Also, my predecessor in this job got a little carried away with the graphical possibilities of Windows95 that in no way benefited the user. I may have become a little over-sensitive on the issue.
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>Anyway, I can't recommend Alan's book highly enough. He uses Microsoft applications extensively as examples of good and bad and if you reall want better looking forms, I am certain this book will be of service.