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Home Archives for Panel discussion

The Right Tool for the Job: Native or Mobile Web? at #SXSW2012

March 13, 2012 By Jonathan Jeter Leave a Comment

Tuesday, March 13, 2012 at the South by Southwest Interactive Conference in Austin, Texas #sxsw #righttool
Panel discussion by Buzz Andersen (Dir of Mobile – Tumblr), Jacob Bijani (Prod Engineer – Tumblr), Majd Taby (Software Engineer – Facebook), Matthew Delaney (WebKit Engineer), and Tom Dale (Sr Software Engineer – Ember.js)

Apps are much easier to monetize than websites, because you can charge up front.

for Tumblr T-shirt Contest / 01 (Photo credit: albyantoniazzi)

The browser rendering engine does a lot of the heavy work that native developers have to contend with. The web browser is a highly evolved medium for content delivery and rich layout.

Read the rest of The Right Tool for the Job: Native or Mobile Web? at #SXSW2012

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8 Design Lessons Learned from the Google Redesign

March 12, 2012 By Jonathan Jeter 1 Comment

After attending yesterday’s “A Brief History of the Complete Redesign of Google,” which gave an in-depth look at the process of the Google User Interface (UI) design and redesign over the year, at the South by Southwest Interactive 2012 Conference, I’ve been thinking a lot about how the redesign process at Google translates over to those of us who also have day jobs taking care of major website brands. A lot of the things that we complain about in our corporate work were discussed in the Google panel discussion, with examples of how they were overcome in this process.

The following things stood out to me as necessary for a complete Brand redesign to be successfully completed. Hopefully, none of the terms that the panel of Googlers used were proprietary or trademarked.

Read the rest of 8 Design Lessons Learned from the Google Redesign

  1. Executive Buy-In
  2. Take the Design Temperature
  3. Unique Concept Presentation
  4. Do the Initial Design in a Vacuum

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Filed Under: UI/UX Tagged With: account legacy items, account possible issues, Brand, brand design groups, Bullet-Proof Prototype, complete brand redesign, complete buy-in, Complete Redesign, conference notes, Creative Lab, Creative Lab team, current design, design changes, Design Lessons, design process, design snippets, design steps, design team, Design Temperature, design tests, Eat Your Own Dog Food, Eating your own dog food, executive buy-in, Food Every company, Google, Google Design, Google design team, Google panel, Google panel discussion, Google Presentations, Google Reader, impossible deadline, individual property owners, Initial Design, initial design research, initial requirements, initial stages, interactive 2012 conference, Kanna, Kennedy, main thing, major website brands, Many times, new design, niche product, online media, online media company, overall design, Own Dog Food, Panel discussion, product owners, real estate, redesign attempt, redesign process, Search engines, South by Southwest, South by Southwest Interactive, strong executive buy-in, Style guide, Technology Internet, Temperature Unique Concept, The Google, the South by Southwest, Unique Concept Presentation, User interface, Vacuum Ask, weight 11x17 paper

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