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Some interface designers have recently taken steps to make [[modal window]]s more obvious and user friendly by darkening the background behind the window or allowing any mouse click outside of the modal window to force the window to close – a design called a [[Lightbox (JavaScript)|Lightbox]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.useit.com/alertbox/application-design.html|title=10 Best Application UIs|author=Jakob Nielsen, Alertbox}}</ref> – thus alleviating the risk of modal errors. [[Jakob Nielsen (usability consultant)|Jakob Nielsen]] states as an advantage of modal dialogs that it improves user awareness. "When something does need fixing, it's better to make sure that the user knows about it." For this goal, the Lightbox design provides strong visual contrast of the dialog over the rest of the visuals. However, while such a method may reduce the risk of inadvertent wrong interactions, it does not solve the problem that the modal window blocks use of the application's normal features and so prevents the user from taking any action to fix the difficulty, or even from scrolling the screen to bring into view information which they need to correctly choose from the options the modal window presents, and it does nothing to alleviate the user's frustration at having blundered into a dead end from which they cannot escape without some more or less destructive consequence.
[[Larry Tesler]], of [[Xerox PARC]] and [[Apple Computer]], disliked modes sufficiently to get a personalized license plate for his car that read: "NO MODES". He used this plate on various cars from the early 1980s until his death in 2020. Along with others, he also used the phrase "Don't Mode Me In" for years as a rallying cry to eliminate or reduce modes.<ref>[http://www.mail-archive.com/lisalist@mail.maclaunch.com/msg00409.html Origins of the Apple Human Interface] by Larry Tesler, Chris Espinosa</ref><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20040511051426/https://computerhistory.org/events/lectures/appleint_10281997/appleint_xscript.shtml Origins of the Apple Human Interface - full transcript]</ref>
Bruce Wyman, the designer of a [[multi-touch]] table for a [[Denver Art Museum]] art exhibition<ref>[http://museumtwo.blogspot.com/2009/06/technology-for-experiences-sake-guest.html Technology for Experience's Sake: Guest Post by Bruce Wyman]</ref> argues that interfaces for several simultaneous users must be modeless, in order to avoid bringing any single user into focus.<ref>[http://www.ixda.org/discuss.php?post=43435#43442 Bruce Wyman's post] at the ixda.org mailing list</ref>
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