In this lively and interactive session, Robert Hoekman, Jr., the author of ‘Designing the Obvious’ and ‘Designing the Moment’, uses the audience to reveal the 7 essential design principles for achieving great application design and the psychology behind them. And he does it all without a single bullet point (gasp!).
The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
Also huffduffed as…
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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SxSW2009; The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design [SxSW 2009]
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules of Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules of Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules of Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
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Seven Rules for Great Web App design
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The Seven Rules of Great Web Application Design
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The Seven Rules for Great Web Application Design
Possibly related…
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Discussing Interface Design With Robert Hoekman Jr.
On February 26th, 2007, Robert Hoekman Jr., author of Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design, spoke to Aarron Walter’s User Centered Interface Design class at The Art Institute of Atlanta via Skype. The topic of our conversation was Robert’s current work as an Interaction Designer and Usability Specialist, and his task-centric design approach that, instead of focusing on nebulous personas, focus on how tasks are performed. Once a task is fully understood, the knowledge can be extrapolated to any demographic.
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Robert Hoekman Jr — The essential elements of great web applications
A presentation given at at Web Directions User Experience, Melbourne Town Hall, May 16 2008, and Web Direction Government, Old Parliament House, Canberra, May 19 2008.
Most great web applications have a few key things in common. But can you name them? Better yet — can you achieve them consistently in your own projects?
In this closing keynote, Robert Hoekman, Jr., author of the Amazon bestseller Designing the Obvious (New Riders) describes the seven qualities of great web-based software and how to achieve each and every one of them by learning to communicate through design. See why it’s important to build only what’s absolutely essential, apply instructive design, create error-proof interactions, surface commonly-used features, and more in this informative session that will change the way you work and enable your users to walk away from your software feeling productive, respected, and smart
From: http://www.webdirections.org/resources/robert-hoekman-jr/
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The Big Web Show #7: Usability Testing | 5 by 5
Dan and Jeffrey talk with special guest Jared Spool about usability testing in the real world, with practical advice for designers, UI engineers, and developers alike.
Jared Spool is the founder of User Interface Engineering, the largest usability research organization of its kind in the world. He’s been working in the field of usability and design since 1978, before the term “usability” was ever associated with computers.
Tagged with bigwebshow jared spool usability testing jeffrey zeldman
