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Images from the Artificial Intelligence Demystified event held on February 27, 2018 at WebMD's offices in New York City and hosted by the New York City chapter of the User Experience Professonals Association.
Jeg står på Nationaltheatret stasjon og er sulten. Foran meg er en Selecta-automat med snadder. Hurra!
Jeg følger instruksjonen på automaten og betaler via sms. Alles gut. Nå gleder jeg meg til sjokolade!
Men betalingsbekreftelsen jeg mottar per sms gir meg ikke betalingskode for å hente ut mat fra automaten. Neida. Jeg takkes derimot for handelen og ønskes en god dag.
Ok. Jeg tar første motgang med fatning og ringer i stedet til Selectas kundeservice. De har vært elskverdige og opplyse om kontaktinfo. Men telefonnummeret er ikke i bruk. Artig.
Jeg er fremdeles sulten og 15 kr fattigere. Aargh!
Skjerpings, Selecta.
드디어 User experience design guidelines for window phone 완주! 모바일 환경에서 data로딩 등 시간이 필요할 때 앱이 stall된 느낌을 주지 않기 위해 적절한 애니메이션이나 이미지를 통해 사용자 시각을 뺏으라는 부분이 인상적
Shasank Nagavarapu Senior Associate of Human Centered Design LEXTANT speaks at the Wards Auto User Experience Conference at the Suburban Collection Showplace in Novi, MI.
Tom Murphy announces the Wards 10 Best UX award winners at the Wards Auto User Experience Conference at the Suburban Collection Showplace in Novi, MI.
Theo Calvin, Shasank Nagavarapu Senior Associate of Human Centered Design LEXTANT and Christie Schweinsberg speak at the Wards Auto User Experience Conference at the Suburban Collection Showplace in Novi, MI.
Using special characters is hard. Some applications include character sets, but getting to them often involves going through two or three screens and doing a lot of clicking. We've had keyboard shortcuts for years, but they're so complex that nobody seems to use them. Many folks don't even know about simple shortcuts like CTRL+F (for find). How can we expect them to remember, let alone type, something like "Option+U O"? The shortcuts remind me of video game cheats from the 90s. The whole process is so messy that lovely sites like Copy Paste Character have cropped up just to address this very basic need.
Enter Google Chrome. By accident, I recently discovered that this decade-long problem may have been solved with a simple long keystroke. Need a character that's a form of an "e"? Simply type the letter as normal, but hold it down for an extra second. This dialog pops up to let you quickly select your character and get on your way. It's not perfect (some marks like bullets don't seem to be available). But it's a great step that's years in the making – one that could eliminate the need for extra screens and complex key progressions.