Archive for June, 2007
Friday, June 29th, 2007
Today at 6PM Eastern time the long-anticipated iPhone will be released to the public. People are already lined up outside Apple and At&T stores to grab up the first batch. It’s predicted that Apple will sell over 200,000 units in the next few days - and they probably will.
Will the device live up to the hype? Yes and No.
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Wednesday, June 20th, 2007
From the world of hypnotherapy, here is another reason to keep your designs as simple as possible. Remember a time when you were at the theater or a show and you just became absorbed into what was going on? What happened was that you went into a state of trance akin to hypnosis.
Here’s why, and how that relates to design.
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Monday, June 18th, 2007
The man pushing the button to open the elevator door and cursing that the doors didn’t close shrugged it off to being Monday morning. The truth is, that I have done the same thing in the same elevator. The icons under the buttons are the little triangles pointing in for close and out for open.
When you’re in a rush, or not thinking about it, the icons look essentially the same. There isn’t enough contrast in the design and position of the buttons. If, besides the icons, the elevator company had place the words “open” and “close” under the buttons - the problem might be solved.
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Friday, June 15th, 2007
I have a secret… I am a hypnosis junkie. I love to read everything I can get my hands on about hypnosis and trance. At one point I even studied to become a certified hypnotherapist. The truth is that I have always found myself absolutely fascinated with how the human mind works. And while I don’t want to hang up a shingle and become a therapist, learning about the unconscious mind helps me to create great human experiences.
Ericsonian hypnosis takes its name from an MD named Milton Ericson who used hypnosis to cure many of his patients, back when it was illegal to do so. He was so good at inducing useful trances in his subjects that, when the AMA tried to pull his license for using hypnosis, he hypnotized the review board and they legalized the practice.
But what does this have to do with human experience design? (more…)
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Wednesday, June 13th, 2007
As of today, this site is the #1 result (out of 89,000,000) for the words - human experience design. I noticed an uptick in my Google traffic, and behold - Google heaven.
Not bad for a non-commercial site where I just spout my own opinions about web design and such. I have actually had a couple of my web sites get fairly high rankings in the search engines. Search engine optimization (SEO), ultimately is a user experience issue - provided you deliver the goods.
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Tuesday, June 12th, 2007
Adobe has just announced the release of Adobe Integrated Runtime (AIR), the project formerly codenamed Apollo. I normally don’t get excited about new software development kit releases, but this is an exception.
AIR promises the ability to take Web 2.0 to the desktop (maybe that’s web 3.0). One of the really fantastic things about AIR is that it allows developers to create applications that run exactly the same way on Mac and PC - HooRah.
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Monday, June 11th, 2007
Personas are all the rage in human experience design. What are they, and how do you use them? What are the advantages of using personas in the design process?
Think of a persona as an archetypical character in a play. In fact the word persona comes from the masks used in ancient Greek plays. The settings of the play are the environments in which your design will be used. Your design is an important prop which helps the character achieve his or her goals in the play.
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Friday, June 8th, 2007
There’s a big push today for web sites to adopt web standards and use semantic markup. This is a good idea generally, but on the web absolutes need to be tempered.
First, there really is no such thing as a web standard. There are web best practices, but the word “standard” implies that everyone agrees and has adopted the practice. While the browsers of today are become more standards compliant (which is like being a little pregnant) they still differ in how they interpret the standards.
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Thursday, June 7th, 2007
Ajax - originally shorthand for Asynchronous JavaScript and XML has now come to mean flashy DHTML effects and sometimes refresh-less page updates. This is not a new technology, but the new name and focus on RIA’s (Rich Internet Applications) has many companies saying ‘me too’ to cramming Ajax features into their page.
A few weeks back, I had the pleasure of seeing the guys from Ajaxian.com speak. When consulting with companies that are having AJAX problems, they said they usually wind up ripping out 80% of their stuff - making their web sites more usable. How could it be that less of a good thing could actually be better?
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Wednesday, June 6th, 2007
One of the things I discovered with my own children, and other people’s kids is that they rarely play with their toys the way they were designed. I’ve seen my niece cram a Barbie doll into a toy baby stroller. I have seen boys turn toy hammers into toy pistols.
Adults are the same, otherwise we wouldn’t need warning labels. Somebody obviously tried to use a hair dryer in the shower once to necessitate having a warning about it. It’s the same with web user interfaces, tools, and electronics. While you can’t plan for every possible crazy thing a person could do with your interface - you need to escape the expert user bias.
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