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Get Satisfaction is "people-powered customer service for absolutely anything".
More screenshots and UI design patterns at Patternry.com
If there's one thing the Japanese seem to thrive on, it's density, not only in their living spaces but also in their user interfaces. This was actually one of the more decipherable ticket machines since it had some English labels, but if you don't read Japanese, good luck figuring out what to do. Luckily, my friend and colleague had lived in Tokyo and showed me the ropes.
To operate this machine, you put your coins in the slot on the right until they add up to one of the fare increments. The base increment is 160 Yen (about US$1.50), the next is 190 Yen, etc. You look up the fares to various stops on maps posted near the ticket machines, but because each subway line does things a little differently, each of the maps is a little different.
Once you put in enough money for a fare, one of the buttons on the long rows in the middle lights up and you press it to receive your ticket. On some machines, you can buy multiple tickets at once (for multiple passengers) or factor in some other options that were (luckily) irrelevant to me. You can also buy fare cards and use them in the slots on the left, but there are at least two different--and incompatible--fare cards, one for the Toei line, and one for the JR line.
As a user interface designer, I can't condone this particular affront to usability, although I have to wonder how such a machine would be perceived in America. The conventional wisdom in the U.S. is that people are simply too stupid to figure out anything this complex. Of course this isn't true; more likely is that people in the U.S. are more apt to be lazy when it comes to deciphering complex tasks (or too busy to consider time spent on deciphering such tasks valuable). For whatever reason, Japanese seem to embrace complexity in certain domains, even though their primary aesthetic is characterized by extreme minimalism. Often, the blending of the two produces cunning and elegant solutions to hard problems, but I doubt anyone would consider this machine such a result.
The Devicescape UI showing a connection to the FON AP we have here in the office for testing.
Still more to do on this (at the very least a button for logging out of the network would be useful), but it is a start.
Thanks also to Erica Sadun for the screenshot utility.
An iPod touch and an iPod nano. One uses a touch interface, the other a clickwheel. Per the terms of this creative commons license, please credit "iPod Touch In 30 Minutes" and link to ipod.in30minutes.com if you use this photo.
This guy was built around the time I was born and recently found at work. Not the most friendly user interface.
Microchip Technology announced the second member of its award-winning and patented GestIC® family. The new MGC3030 3D gesture controller features simplified user-interface options focused on gesture detection, enabling true one-step design-in of 3D gesture recognition in consumer and embedded devices. Housed in an easy-to-manufacture SSOP28 package, the MGC3030 expands the use of highly sought after 3D gesture control features to high-volume cost-sensitive applications such as toys, audio and lighting. To learn more about the MGC3030, visit www.microchip.com/MGC3030-Page-012015a.
The new graphical user interface for autopsy only runs on Windows, but can be run using wine. In order to get it to work you need to install java jre 1.6 or higher in wine, and then download autopsy and tsk. Then just run autopsy.exe from the Ubuntu GUI, opening with Wine. (Seems like it is best to configure this app for Win7). You will need openGLX on your Ubuntu.
In Interactive Design 3, students are asked to select from one of three client briefs to develop a social change project. Cherie, Michael and Jay chose to develop a mobile application to assist with earthquake preparedness. The application offers device features, such as RSS, GPS tracking and "bounce location" to sustain user correspondence during disaster relief efforts.
The team divided the roles and responsibilities to tackle strategic review, competitive analysis, moodboards, user experience, information architecture and interactive design.
Learn more about VFS's one-year Digital Design program at www.vfs.com/digitaldesign.
Diseño interfaz de usuario. Aplicación en desarrollo Notall, proximamente la lanzaremos.
Más detalles en www.tesokdesign.es
Desarrollo www.uinapp.com
The City of Boston has listened to my suggestions for improvement to their tax payment page:
Real Property Tax Payments
www.cityofboston.gov/realestate/
It now says:
10-digits PARCEL ID
ward(2)+parcel(5)+subparcel(3) -see the bill
It used to ask for 'Parcel ID (10-digit number)' with no explanation.
Thanks.
Used on this blog post:
City of Boston Listened and Improved the User Interface on the Real Property Tax Payments Page
offonatangent.blogspot.com/2009/02/city-of-boston-listene...
In Interactive Design 3, students are asked to select from one of three client briefs to develop a social change project. Cherie, Michael and Jay chose to develop a mobile application to assist with earthquake preparedness. The application offers device features, such as RSS, GPS tracking and "bounce location" to sustain user correspondence during disaster relief efforts.
The team divided the roles and responsibilities to tackle strategic review, competitive analysis, moodboards, user experience, information architecture and interactive design.
Learn more about VFS's one-year Digital Design program at www.vfs.com/digitaldesign.
As we have CS6 license,Adobe offers a promotional pricing for existing CS customers applies to the first year of membership. Offer valid till August 31, 2013,personally i dont have an idea to buy CC version,but my friends are saying why can't we use this offer price by validating our CS6 license so bought one year subscription for half rate.
My sincere thanks to Rajesh,Dinesh,Satish,Prem and our Devolopement Team.
Features Inside :
Adobe Camera Raw comes under filter menu in first time.
New Smart Sharpen fliter.
Advanced lens corrections.
Spot healing inside camera raw.
Radial graduated filter inside camera raw.
Have a Nice Week ahead Friends :)
The Design Revolution spreads to Hyderabad. The first ever Dive Into User-Interface Design and UX workshop in the cybercity of India. Powered by NASSCOM 10000Startups and hosted at 91Springboard. Participants included Co-founders, Developers, Directors, Vice-Presidents, and IT, design, and tech geeks. From Olivo Health, Custom Furnish, Hitachi Consulting, Paradigm Creatives, Bradsol, and more. 25-26 April 2015. Nurtured by SHEROES India.
Exploring rich user interfaces using Flex. That's James Ward, Mike Levin and Jim Clarke from left to right.
New user interface, role-based views, and productivity tools give power users what they want while letting casual users easily get to information
mobile (Fennec) user interface still to come
(thanks Michael Wu!)
more info here: blog.vlad1.com/2010/02/02/android-progress-more-pixels-ed...
To enable development with the MGC3030, Microchip’s Woodstar MGC3030 Development Kit (part # DM160226) was also announced today. It is available now for $139 via any Microchip sales representative or authorized worldwide distributor, or from microchipDIRECT (www.microchip.com/Dev-Kit-012015a). The kit comes with the AUREA Graphical User Interface, the central tool to parameterize the MGC3030 and the Colibri Suite to suit the needs of any design. AUREA is available via a free download from www.microchip.com/AUREA-GUI-012015a. The Colibri Gesture Suite is an extensive library of proven and natural 3D gestures for hands and fingers that is pre-programmed into the MGC3030.
In Interactive Design 3, students are asked to select from one of three client briefs to develop a social change project. Cherie, Michael and Jay chose to develop a mobile application to assist with earthquake preparedness. The application offers device features, such as RSS, GPS tracking and "bounce location" to sustain user correspondence during disaster relief efforts.
The team divided the roles and responsibilities to tackle strategic review, competitive analysis, moodboards, user experience, information architecture and interactive design.
Learn more about VFS's one-year Digital Design program at www.vfs.com/digitaldesign.
Microchip's PIC32 “MX1” and “MX2” MCUs are the smallest and lowest-cost PIC32 microcontrollers, and are the first PIC32 MCUs to feature dedicated audio and capacitive-sensing peripherals.
The Touch sports the new HTC developed TouchFLO user interface that supports the use of a stylus as well as a fingertip for control. A fingertip can be used to drag/scroll on-screen lists (like the Inbox), and can even be used to "throw" the screen to let it scroll on its own - until stopped.
You'll find more details and some video footage of the Touch in action at www.mobileburn.com/review.jsp?Id=3426&source=FLICKR.