Tagged with “ux” (11) activity chart

  1. Matt Balara — Flogging design: best practices in online shop design

    Considering how many busi nesses depend upon the web for their income, it’s shock­ing how poorly designed most shops are. Not only aes thet i cally, but also as far as ease of use, retail psy chol ogy and user expe ri ence are con cerned. How can we design bet­ter shops? If cus tomers enjoy shop ping more, won’t our clients earn more? Can forms be fun? What’s the psy chol ogy behind online pur chases? How can online and offline buy ing expe ri ences be har monised? Matt Balara will share some of his 15 years of expe ri ence design ing web sites, the vast major ity of which have sold some thing or other.

    —Huffduffed by bigskinnyboy 2 years ago

  2. Peter Merholz in Conversation with Don Norman About UX & Innovation

    Peter Merholz chats with Don Norman, author and co-author of fourteen books, including the seminal The Design of Everyday Things, and his recently released The Design of Future Things, about what he thinks about user experience design today and what companies need to do to innovate. From http://www.adaptivepath.com/ideas/podcasts/

    —Huffduffed by bigskinnyboy 3 years ago

  3. SpoolCast: Moving Beyond Static Forms with Luke Wroblewski

    Web forms are the mouth that feeds most web apps. There’s no way around that. Yet, few people are thinking about how to make one of the more unpleasant parts of the web more pleasant. The world’s foremost authority on web forms is Luke Wroblewski, author of the heralded book, Web Form Design.

    • Duration: 35m | 16 MB
    • Recorded: January, 2010
    • Brian Christiansen, UIE Podcast Producer

    From http://www.uie.com/brainsparks/2010/02/11/spoolcast-moving-beyond-static-forms-with-luke-wroblewski/

    —Huffduffed by bigskinnyboy 3 years ago

  4. User Experience Best Practices

    Nick will explore the best practices of user experience by reviewing some of the most popular and highly trafficked websites today such as eBay, Amazon, Toyota, Flickr, Twitter, Netflix and more. Nick will identify and explain both good an bad experiences on these sites on the merits of visual design, information architecture, interaction, and ease of use. If there is time we will open the floor for audience submissions and to provide quick feedback and areas of improvement.

    —Huffduffed by bigskinnyboy 3 years ago

  5. Jared Spool - The Dawning of the Age of Experience

    —Huffduffed by bigskinnyboy 3 years ago

  6. Chapter 1 of “Selling Usability: User Experience Infiltration Tactics” by John Rhodes

    Chapter 1 is also available as a PDF for free from here:

    http://sellingusability.com/SellingUsabilitySample3.pdf

    —Huffduffed by bigskinnyboy 3 years ago

  7. Being a UX Team of One

    What’s the best way to evolve design ideas quickly? Get together with other designers and brainstorm. The second best way? Adapt the methods of larger UX groups to a team of one. Learn how in this presentation, which shares lightweight techniques for quick and effective brainstorming on your own.

    Leah Buley, Adaptive Path

    —Huffduffed by bigskinnyboy 3 years ago

  8. Jeremy Keith on Ajax design considerations

    Jeremy Keith from Clearleft discusses his session at 2008’s UI13 conference called Ajax Design Considerations that Tim attended. What do UX professionals need to know about Ajax to best make use of it in websites and web applications? And why is Jeremy’s title at Clearleft currently "Lineman for the County"?

    From http://www.designcritique.net/index.php?post_id=531611

    —Huffduffed by bigskinnyboy 3 years ago

  9. Jesse James Garrett on what User Experience Design is

    "Some describe it as making things easy and enjoyable to use. Others describe it as all the elements that impact someone’s perception of a product or system. Jesse James Garrett says it’s a lot like going on a great first date." via - http://www.teawithteresa.com/2009/02/what-heck-is-user-experience-design.html

    —Huffduffed by bigskinnyboy 3 years ago

  10. Designing the User Experience Curve - Andy Budd

    Andy Budd is an internationally renowned user experience designer and web standards expert from Clearleft. In his speech at the Future of Web Design conference in London he compares the user experience of websites to various real life examples. He highlights the importance of user experience in web design with some useful little tips that can be put into effect on your future projects.

    —Huffduffed by bigskinnyboy 3 years ago

Page 1 of 2Older