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Amazon provides a similar experience to the Gap, utilizing Interactive Single-Page Process
Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3
The view from Blink's office in downtown Seattle. This is looking out at Elliott Bay with Puget Sound beyond that and the Olympic Mountains in the background. Photo by Kelly Franznick.
Vrede en Lust
Research, information architecture, prototyping, usability testing on prototypes, interface design
The security questions on the London 2012 ticket registration website (http://tickets.london2012.com) are subjective meaning their answers may well change over the next two years, especially for younger visitors to the site.
Security questions should be based on solid facts that won't change, but that are hard for potential fraudsters to divine.
You should also take the target audience's age into account. For example, first school will not be so obscure for a 12 year old as it would for an adult.
Invited by Like People Do and London's SOAS, School of Oriental and African Studies, to take part in a user experience report for China's Terracotta Warriors Museum Complex and Daming Palace Site.
Photon Infotech | UX design | Image source: www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20140709083014-645154...
Panelists take questions from the audience at the National Press Club on November 5, 2009. Pictured (L-R): Courtney Clark, Jim Hunn, Brian Dunbar, Roger Burks.
The panel takes questions from the audience at Forum One's seminar at the National Press Club on November 5, 2009. Pictured (L-R): Courtney Clark, Roger Burks, Michael Edson, and Sophie Campagne Burns.
Resolution-independent layout serves the near-print level of detail available on modern devices.
The interface falls back to bitmap images where scalable vector graphics aren't supported.
Adding an “edit” link to Google Reader’s feed list and toggling in common actions could potentially make it easier to manage subscriptions
Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3
Just like in life, a really big part of being comfortable in your surroundings is just knowing where you are. Even if users don't ultimately get lost, they'll feel uneasy using your website or app if you don't remind them from time-to-time (with a heading or a breadcrumb or something else) where they are in it. The people behind The Verge, a digital tech magazine, get this. They give users a sidebar that follows them down an article as they read. No forgetting your place anymore. It makes readers more comfortable, adds context and provides jump points for those who may just want to get to specific bits.