View allAll Photos Tagged UserExperience
Graphic Recording from the Lean UX NYC conference, April 11, 2013 by Dean Meyers (@deanmeistr)
Topics and Speakers in this set:
A New Era at IBM. Lean UX Leading the Way - Ari Font Llitjós
Game On. LeanUX + Content: 2 Players. One Game. - Ian Alexander
Your Mom’s a User: How to communicate with normal people in your user experience - Bill Beard
Practical Guide to Just-In-Time UX: JITUX – Matt Moran & Meng He
Vanilla Draft Wireframes. Experimenting with various ways to present information about non-chronologically oriented stories.
pictures from wednesday: user experience day. guests, speakers and location.
pictures from wednesday: user experience. guests, speaker & location.
www.openjet.com/index.jsp - Example of Refining Search pattern.
More screenshots and UI design patterns at Patternry.com
Parking garage elevator control panel at Whole Foods in Santa Monica, CA. Relative, write-in labels disambiguate well. Shows the importance of writing in an interface.
pictures from wednesday: user experience day. guests, speakers and location.
pictures from wednesday: user experience. guests, speaker & location.
Backpackit reveals a multi-field form for editing a note’s title and body
Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3
The new mini-feed goodness (or badness, depending on who you're talking to) comes with these sweet icons too. Me likes.
pictures from wednesday: user experience day. guests, speakers and location.
pictures from wednesday: user experience. guests, speaker & location.
Heat map showing first 15 seconds of fixations on participants Facebook home page
Gray shapes cover exemplary profile, on witch we show fixations of 30 participants
Kalle Kormann-Philipson
User Experience & Interaction Designer, Google
Stephan Micklitz
Tech Lead and Manager - User Facing Privacy Team, Google
Disqus allows comments to editing inline within the context of other comments
Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3
Boris Lakowski
Marketingberater, Digital-Stratege, Unternehmer, Dozent, Sternsdorf Lakowski & Partner
Configuring modules on the My Yahoo! page can be done directly in place
Designing Web Interfaces, by Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, Copyright 2009 Bill Scott and Theresa Neil, 978-0-596-51625-3
Boris Lakowski
Marketingberater, Digital-Stratege, Unternehmer, Dozent, Sternsdorf Lakowski & Partner
Boris Lakowski
Marketingberater, Digital-Stratege, Unternehmer, Dozent, Sternsdorf Lakowski & Partner
Default Icons: $$$ != RIP
updated about 7 minutes ago
Default Icons: We're here to make your friends page unbearably irritating to look at after inviting your friends
updated about 2 years ago
A look at the character stat, equipment, skill bar, and tooltip interfaces.
http://matthewventre.com/2009/12/a-look-at-the-player-experience-of-torchlight/
Two panels comprising 36 unlabeled light switches.
"I'm just going to turn the outdoor lights off. I may be some time."
Ideum recently tested out a paper prototype both with Ideum staff and onsite at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles. To learn more about Ideum's Creative Services visit our website.
They originally had a sign that said "Til" the airport. "Til" is the Danish word for "to". Well, someone realised non-Danish readers might not understand the word "til" and added "to" - in a different typography and very obviously squeezed in. The Til/To combo looked ridiculous to any sensible typography geek. We had to live with it for a while, apparently. The other day I discovered the sign had been updated. Til and to were removed. Which makes perfect sense!
The Metro logo tells you that this is the stairway (with nearby elevator) to the Metro platform. If you didn't know the logo, but knew they were white trains, you can step back a bit and actually see the white light-rail trains above you. The useful parts are the names - the destinations of the trains. These are on the sign. Going up the stairs will take you to the Metro, which takes you to trains going in both directions. The crucial info to non-Danish readers is the name "Copenhagen Airport" in English, along with the airplane logo, in case you don't read English either. Til and to are completely superfluous, and that is what the signmakers finally discovered. Hurrah!
As for blind or low-vision people, all you have on the ground are the raised studs that guide you to the various platforms and stairwells. I think you need a person to guide you to the right platform for the S-trains (the platform from which you see this sign) or the metro. Blind, regular users of this transport service might need guidance the first few times to get the layout right in their minds, and then they would be OK. I think.
Little by little.