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Tenth edition of the Dive Into User-Interface Design and UX workshop, in New Delhi. Conducted by Niyam Bhushan. Powered by NASSCOM 10,000Startups. On 26-27 Feb 2015. Venue kindly hosted by cks.in
White letters in the front of the office space.
On June 4th Bill Scott, the man who helped engineer Netflix's UI, got on his soapbox at ZURB to help you learn how he helped his teams approach product design.
The ZURB Soapbox lecture series is a new venture ZURB is embarking on where we invite entrepreneurs, designers, managers, movers, shakers and friends of ZURB to speak to a like-minded audience and spar with them afterward.
ZURB is a close-knit team of interaction designers and strategists that help companies design better (www.zurb.com).
Expanding on Microchip’s existing 8-bit PIC® microcontroller-based mTouch development tools for capacitive touch, the PICDEM Touch Sense 2 Demo Board enables designers to implement this leading-edge user interface with Microchip’s wide portfolio of 16-bit PIC24F MCUs. Equipped with capacitive touch-sensing keys and sliders, the board allows designers to evaluate this interface in their applications using the Windows-based mTouch Diagnostic Tool, an easy-to-use Graphical User Interface (GUI) that is included in the mTouch Sensing Solution SDK. The software libraries, source code and other support materials that come with the board further shorten development time and reduce design costs.
. Expanding on Microchip’s existing 8-bit PIC® microcontroller-based mTouch development tools for capacitive touch, the PICDEM Touch Sense 2 Demo Board enables designers to implement this leading-edge user interface with Microchip’s wide portfolio of 16-bit PIC24F MCUs. Equipped with capacitive touch-sensing keys and sliders, the board allows designers to evaluate this interface in their applications using the Windows-based mTouch Diagnostic Tool, an easy-to-use Graphical User Interface (GUI) that is included in the mTouch Sensing Solution SDK. The software libraries, source code and other support materials that come with the board further shorten development time and reduce design costs.
. Expanding on Microchip’s existing 8-bit PIC® microcontroller-based mTouch development tools for capacitive touch, the PICDEM Touch Sense 2 Demo Board enables designers to implement this leading-edge user interface with Microchip’s wide portfolio of 16-bit PIC24F MCUs. Equipped with capacitive touch-sensing keys and sliders, the board allows designers to evaluate this interface in their applications using the Windows-based mTouch Diagnostic Tool, an easy-to-use Graphical User Interface (GUI) that is included in the mTouch Sensing Solution SDK. The software libraries, source code and other support materials that come with the board further shorten development time and reduce design costs.
. Expanding on Microchip’s existing 8-bit PIC® microcontroller-based mTouch development tools for capacitive touch, the PICDEM Touch Sense 2 Demo Board enables designers to implement this leading-edge user interface with Microchip’s wide portfolio of 16-bit PIC24F MCUs. Equipped with capacitive touch-sensing keys and sliders, the board allows designers to evaluate this interface in their applications using the Windows-based mTouch Diagnostic Tool, an easy-to-use Graphical User Interface (GUI) that is included in the mTouch Sensing Solution SDK. The software libraries, source code and other support materials that come with the board further shorten development time and reduce design costs.
Expanding on Microchip’s existing 8-bit PIC® microcontroller-based mTouch development tools for capacitive touch, the PICDEM Touch Sense 2 Demo Board enables designers to implement this leading-edge user interface with Microchip’s wide portfolio of 16-bit PIC24F MCUs. Equipped with capacitive touch-sensing keys and sliders, the board allows designers to evaluate this interface in their applications using the Windows-based mTouch Diagnostic Tool, an easy-to-use Graphical User Interface (GUI) that is included in the mTouch Sensing Solution SDK. The software libraries, source code and other support materials that come with the board further shorten development time and reduce design costs.
Tenth edition of the Dive Into User-Interface Design and UX workshop, in New Delhi. Conducted by Niyam Bhushan. Powered by NASSCOM 10,000Startups. On 26-27 Feb 2015. Venue kindly hosted by cks.in
Wireframe for intranet design
url: www.varto.com.ua/
Find something interesting? Need a website, web-design or web interface? Feel free to contact us:
e-mail: terracotta.design@gmail.com
skype: terracottadesign
Certificates of participation for those who attended both days of the workshop.
'Dive Into User-Interface Design' Workshop 01 with Niyam Bhushan. At 91Springboard Delhi, India, on 26 - 27 September 2014. More details at bit.ly/niyam
Tenth edition of the Dive Into User-Interface Design and UX workshop, in New Delhi. Conducted by Niyam Bhushan. Powered by NASSCOM 10,000Startups. On 26-27 Feb 2015. Venue kindly hosted by cks.in
Oh, Just had some exciting news about Fidel's little sister Karmann (Cabasse Hot Toddy), She has just qualified for Cruft's next year so that will be exciting to see how she does...
Plus we have decided that we are getting a little friend for Fidel in November/ December when we get a new place.
www.flickr.com/photos/seeminglee/sets/72157601912748632/
SML Flickr Collections: SML Collection
SML Flickr Collections: SML Projects
Copyright Notice
Copyright 2001 IconNicholson / LBi International. All rights reserved.
'Dive Into User-Interface Design' Workshop 01 with Niyam Bhushan. At 91Springboard Delhi, India, on 26 - 27 September 2014. More details at bit.ly/niyam
www.flickr.com/photos/seeminglee/sets/72157601912748632/
SML Flickr Collections: SML Collection
SML Flickr Collections: SML Projects
Copyright Notice
Copyright 2001 IconNicholson / LBi International. All rights reserved.
Tenth edition of the Dive Into User-Interface Design and UX workshop, in New Delhi. Conducted by Niyam Bhushan. Powered by NASSCOM 10,000Startups. On 26-27 Feb 2015. Venue kindly hosted by cks.in
Margot Shetterly gave a fireside chat with Erin White at the opening keynote of the edUi Conference at the Jefferson Theater in Charlottesville on 10/8/18.
Photo by Pat Jarrett/Virginia Humanities
Microchip Technology's MCP2036 Analog Front End (AFE) for inductive touch-sensing applications. Complimenting the Company’s royalty-free mTouch™ Inductive Touch-Sensing Solutions, the fully-integrated MCP2036 AFE works with almost any 8-, 16- or 32-bit PIC® microcontroller (MCU) or dsPIC® Digital Signal Controller (DSC), making it even easier and more cost effective for designers to enhance user interfaces with inductive touch-sensing technology.
'Dive Into User-Interface Design and UX' workshop, ninth edition. Powered by NASSCOM 10000Startups. Conducted by Niyam Bhushan at 91SpringBoard, in Gurgaon, Haryana. More details at bit.ly/niyam
Microchip Technology's MCP2036 Analog Front End (AFE) for inductive touch-sensing applications. Complimenting the Company’s royalty-free mTouch™ Inductive Touch-Sensing Solutions, the fully-integrated MCP2036 AFE works with almost any 8-, 16- or 32-bit PIC® microcontroller (MCU) or dsPIC® Digital Signal Controller (DSC), making it even easier and more cost effective for designers to enhance user interfaces with inductive touch-sensing technology.
Vicci is featured in a number of new interactive directory systems including Southgate and Millwoods Town Center in Edmonton, Southcenter and Cross Iron Mills in Calgary, Woodgrove in Nanaimo, Mayfair in Victoria, and more.
Who'd have thought you could make a light switch complicated?
After staring at it for a little while, it looks fairly self-explanatory: press the "light group" on the left (although it'll take trial and error to work out which is which), then adjust the brightness with the control at the top right or switch it off with the button-right button. Not as obvious as the old-fashioned ones, but I guess you're supposed to be intelligent if you're in a University. Let's hope the cleaners have PhDs.
But once you start trying to use it, things get more complicated. Pressing the buttons on the left slowly bring the lights up to their "default setting" (about 80% brightness). Although the fade might be funky, the fact that they don't come on straight away makes the trial and error "which button is which" process much slower.
Similarly, the buttons on the top-right adjust the light level with a delay on both starting and stopping - so it doesn't feel like it's doing anything, but then it "overshoots" long after you've taken your finger off.
The button on the right actually doesn't switch off the selected light group as might reasonably be expected, but instead plunges the whole room into darkness. Useful perhaps, but not exactly obvious.
If we do so badly designing lightswitches, it's no wonder that computer software is (generally) such hell to use...
This was the present I was given by Helen's group, mostly Amy Dillon, on leaving Nortel over ten years ago. It made a cameo appearance in the previous shot, and I felt it deserved a bigger part.
Getting certificates ready for participants.
'Dive Into User-Interface Design' Workshop 01 with Niyam Bhushan. At 91Springboard Delhi, India, on 26 - 27 September 2014. More details at bit.ly/niyam