Tags / user-experience-2

Tagged with “user-experience-2” (9) activity chart

  1. Jared Spool – Mobile & UX: Inside the Eye of the Perfect Storm Live! » UIE Brain Sparks

    —Huffduffed by roy 2 weeks ago

  2. Adam Connor & Aaron Irizarry – Collaboration through Design Studio and Critique » UIE Brain Sparks

    Structure aids collaboration and helps achieve consensus. If everyone is participating in a structured environment, you begin with a greater level of understanding. Using a design studio as a process can get everyone on the team communicating and moving in the same direction.

    Adam explains a design studio, and breaks it into three steps: sketch, present, and critique. Both Aaron and Adam believe that critique is often a misunderstood part of the process. Anyone can give feedback, or have a gut reaction, but critique is a more thoughtful and deliberate process. Critique is more analytical and needs to be measured against goals.

    Critique as a tool is all about arriving at understanding. Understanding why a designer made certain color choices, or layout, for example. Within a design studio, critique is a powerful evaluation method that you repeat multiple times. Using these techniques will get the team understanding and designing together.

    Adam and Aaron discuss these methods with Jared Spool in this podcast. They will be presenting one of the daylong workshops at the User Interface 17 conference in Boston, November 5-7. Learn more about the speakers and their workshops at uiconf.com.

    —Huffduffed by LukeBacon 9 months ago

  3. Luke Wroblewski – Examining Mobile User Input » UIE Brain Sparks

    —Huffduffed by lewisnyman one year ago

  4. Josh Clark – Discoverability in Designing for Touch » UIE Brain Sparks

    —Huffduffed by briansuda one year ago

  5. Bill Scott – Design Patterns for Multiple Platforms » UIE Brain Sparks

    —Huffduffed by lewisnyman one year ago

  6. Hagan Rivers – Simplifying Complex Applications » UIE Brain Sparks

    It’s easy for applications to get overcomplicated and bogged down with data – especially in an enterprise setting. It’s hard to keep track of so many different things. When dashboards and widgets are employed, the goal is to make your life easier, but often that’s not the result. The solution—simplify these applications for specific use cases and give the right people the right information they need for their given task.

    Hagan Rivers, of Two Rivers Consulting, spends her time meeting with teams to show them exactly how to streamline these complex applications. Whether it’s an app for managing purchase orders or hospital patients, there is a lot to consider. Hagan expresses the value of taking a step back and sifting through the complexity. This allows you to untangle the necessary bits to arrive at a better focus.

    —Huffduffed by jaronbarends one year ago

  7. Luke Wroblewski – Designing for Mobile » UIE Brain Sparks

    —Huffduffed by lewisnyman one year ago

  8. Stephanie Sullivan Rewis and Greg Rewis – What Designers Need to Know About HTML5 and CSS3 » UIE Brain Sparks

    The introduction of CSS3 and HTML5 brings with it a host of new capabilities. With most modern browsers supporting CSS3 and HTML5, implementing them into your designs is becoming easier. Understanding what is now possible with these new standards can help you create better designs more efficiently and effectively than ever before.

    —Huffduffed by tribehut one year ago

  9. Dan Rubin – CSS3 for Everyone » UIE Brain Sparks

    Incorporating CSS3 into your designs allows you to create innovative designs with less code and reliance on images. The level of compatibility with many of the browser options out there is already impressive and it continues to grow. Taking advantage of the new CSS3 features helps to shift heavier visual elements to the browser itself.

    —Huffduffed by tribehut one year ago