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Bill Scott – Designing for Mice and Men

May 24, 2011 By Jonathan Jeter Leave a Comment

UIE Web App Master’s Tour – Seattle, Washington – May 23, 2011

Bill Scott from Netflix – Designing for Mice and Men
Bill Scott, Netflix – Designing for Mice and Men

Bill has been in the industry for a long time, at Sabre, Yahoo! and now Netflix.

Challenge is designing across devices: web, mobile, tablets & TV. Iteration changes based on devices. In Canada, they don’t even have a queue.

People like to make lists.

Chaos – 400 SKUs (devices) can run Netflix. Different manufacturers can create different NetFlix experiences. Using HTML5 for all platforms. Using Webkit (QT Webkit, Skia Webkit, iOS Webkit) Takes advantage of the same engineering team to create for most devices.

Server-driven dynamic UI

Webstyle release vs CE firmware updates

Support A/B Testing

Controlled Variances

Managing Across Platforms

Read the rest of Bill Scott – Designing for Mice and Men

  • portability layer (html5)
  • vary the experience across platforms
  • design for user posture, input capabilities, navigation styles and display capabilities

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Filed Under: User Interface / User Experience Design Tagged With: actual execution, app store, artificial constructs, Bill Scott, Change blindness, change focus attention, Content drives, delight simulate physicality, design principles, different netflix experiences, display capabilities, Dynamic Multi-Bulk Rater, dynamic ui webstyle, engineering team, experience cushion, input capabilities, Invitation Advances, IOS (Apple), Iteration changes, Joe Hewitt, Kids Netflix site, Kindle broken metaphor, Larger box shots, long time, maintain flow, maintain flow change, navigation styles, phone app, physical dimension, physical spinart, platforms design, Platforms portability layer, Product Issues, QT Webkit, Reward Moments, similar action invitations, Skia Webkit, Stock-keeping unit, Technology Internet, Testing Controlled Variances, Touch-Hold Moments, Twitter apps, Twitter iPad app, UI, UIE, UIE Web App, Use directness, Use metaphors, user posture, UX, vs ce firmware, web app, Web App Master, Web App Master's Tour, web vs, web vs touch, |input|posture|navigation|display web| tablet|

Josh Clark – Mobile Apps: Native or Web-Based?

May 23, 2011 By Jonathan Jeter Leave a Comment

UIE Web App Master’s Tour – Seattle, Washington – May 23, 2011

Josh Clark (author of TapWorthy) – Mobile Apps-Native or Web-Based
Josh Clark – Mobile Apps-Native or Web-Based?

Josh Clark, Author of TapWorthy

Mobile Apps

Mobile is growing quickly, with many platforms (many cultures)

App design needs to take mobile culture into accounts, how to develop for a iPhone user vs Android user, etc.

Read the rest of Josh Clark – Mobile Apps: Native or Web-Based?

Blackberry still has 40% of the global enterprise

  • Text-centric
  • low browser activity (blackberry browser has sucked until recently, when they adopted webkit)
  • how does your app fit into a text heavy culture

iPhone

  • active
  • high browser activity
  • spenders (big buyers – 70% of ebays mobile commerce is iPhone; eBay accounts for 25% of mobile commerce)
  • older, wealthier
  • according to OKCupid, iPhone users have more sex

Android

  • it’s about the technology
  • it’s about tools and features
  • customization
  • cutting edge
  • technically-proficient, customized

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Filed Under: User Interface / User Experience Design Tagged With: Android, App design, app fit, app market, app store, app store approvals, Apple, articles josh clark, browser activity, content delivery, customization cutting edge, design-neutral content delivery, different apps, dumbed-down apps, ebays mobile commerce, Ethan Marcotte, heavy culture iPhone, IOS, iPhone, iPhone user vs, iphone users, Josh Clark, leader windows phone, market leader, Microsoft Windows, mobile apps, mobile commerce, mobile cultures, mobile developers, mobile device, mobile devices, Mobile Mindsets, Mobile phone, Mobile phones, mobile platforms, mobile site, mobile web, Mobile Web Design, mobile web site, native app, new business models, PhoneGap, real winner, Reference Web UX, Responsive Web Design, sex android, single platform winner, Slower Clunky Graphics, TapWorthy Mobile Apps, Technology Internet, text message apps, Text-centric low browser, top-selling smartphone platform, Unnecessary content, vs native app, weaknesses great expectations, web app, Web App Master, Web App Master's Tour, Web application, Web apps, Web Design, web site, Web UX, web vs, Web vs Mobile, web vs native app fight, Windows Mobile, younger lower cost

Social Farming?

May 23, 2011 By Jonathan Jeter Leave a Comment

Goat kids will stay with their mother until th...
Image via Wikipedia

My Farm is a social networking project in which members (who pay £30) work together (online, not actually working together) to decide how the farm should be managed. Decisions are made about what is planted in what locations, what livestock should be raised, etc., etc.

The web site keeps up-to-date information about what is going on and the progress of crops and livestock. There is even a webcam so you can see what is going on real-time. For educational purposes, I think it’s great. As far as changing the way farming is done in the future…

I really don’t think so.

 

Related articles
  • The power of Family Farmers and Farm Aid (stillisstillmoving.com)
  • Sustainability of the livestock sector (ikrweb.wordpress.com)

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Filed Under: Social Media Tagged With: Agricultural and Rural Economics, Community Supported Agriculture, educational purposes, Farm, Livestock, networking project, real time, Social Farming, Social network service, social networking, social networking project, Technology Internet, up-to-date information, web site

Noah Iliinsky – The Steps to Beautiful Visualizations

May 23, 2011 By Jonathan Jeter Leave a Comment

UIE Web App Master’s Tour – Seattle, Washington – May 23, 2011

 

Noah Iliinsky - The Steps to Beautiful Visualizations
Noah Iliinsky - The Steps to Beautiful Visualizations

Noah Iliinsky

How do you start from a mountain of data and create something presentable that conveys the message?

Analysis vs Presentation

Data Visualization vs Infographic

Data Visualizations are generated

Infographics are designed (manually drawn)

Education vs Persuasion

Education distributes information without a message

Persuasion has an agenda

Complexity

The number of different information axes represented

Large number of targets

Finite number of visual properties

Qualitative relationships are more difficult to represent because there are no standards and the reader has to be educated before the reader can understand the data.

Intentional choices are superior to arbitrary choices. You need to make intentional choices when presenting data, not just use a template of what you’ve done before.

Read the rest of Noah Iliinsky – The Steps to Beautiful Visualizations

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Filed Under: User Interface / User Experience Design Tagged With: actual placement, agenda complexity, appropriate encodings, arbitrary choices, arbitrary design choices, Beautiful Visualizations, better answer, better option, Data Visualizations, Default formats, design elements, Different goals, different information, Different methods, different preserve order, favorite flavors, graphical treatment, Infographic Data Visualizations, Information graphics, Information visualization, intentional choices, Large number, location relative placement, message persuasion, necessary information, new format, Noah Iliinsky, numeric labels, Pattern matching, pattern matching machines, pattern violations, Persuasion Education, placement correlates, placement matters axes, Qualitative relationships, real life, redundant encoding, right answer, Technology Internet, UI, UIE, UIE Web App, unintentional patterns, user research, UX, visual properties, vs presentation data, web app, Web App Master, Web App Master's Tour

An App That Tracks Your Driving… and Sends the Results to Your Insurance Company

May 15, 2011 By Jonathan Jeter Leave a Comment

A red light camera in Chicago, USA.
Image via Wikipedia
State Farm has created an app that helps track your driving habits. They’re not the only insurance company to jump into the driving app space as Progressive has created a monitoring device that bases your insurance cost on your driving habits. While the idea of an app that helps you improve your driving sounds great, isn’t there any concern that the data will somehow find itself in the wrong hands?

With red-light camera‘s everywhere and GPS navigation companies selling data to police departments, isn’t the next logical step that the data from our cars and apps will be used to send us invoices for road usage, tickets for speeding or wreckless driving or raising our insurance rates based on driving habits, regardless of who is driving the car.

Read the rest of An App That Tracks Your Driving… and Sends the Results to Your Insurance Company

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Filed Under: Awesome or Scary? Tagged With: app space, backseat driver, big deal, Clear Mobile App, driver feedback, Driver Feedback App, driving habits, fine line, gps navigation, GPS navigation companies, GPS navigation device, insurance company, insurance cost, Insurance Discount, insurance rates, logical step, monitoring device, navigation companies, police departments, Progressive Corporation, red-light camera, road usage, s driver, state farm, State Farm app, State Farm Insurance, State Farm Steer, Technology Internet, The Backseat Driver, wreckless driving, wrong hands, Your Insurance Company

Awesome or Scary?

May 11, 2011 By Jonathan Jeter Leave a Comment

Google I/O
Image by Hezi Cohen via Flickr

A lot of really cool things have been coming out of the Google I/O conference this week, one of which is zero-touch near field communication (NFC) in the upcoming version of Android (name Ice Cream Sandwich). Engadget.com has a video of the demonstration where two Android Nexus phones share things with each other without having to press anything or start an app.

On the surface, that’s really cool. You don’t have to wait to fire up an app or wait for someone else to approve your request. However, how easy is it going to be to “pocket share” a web site or your contact information with someone you’re standing next to in line at the store. Or once NFC payments are a reality, how easy is it going to be to accidentally pay for someone else’s purchase or have your credit card information unwittingly shared?

Read the rest of Awesome or Scary?

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Filed Under: Technology Tagged With: Android, android 0-click nfc, Android Ice Cream, Android Ice Cream Sandwich, Android Nexus phones, bad history, contact information, cool things, credit card information, field communication, Google, Google I/O, Hezi Cohen, Ice Cream Sandwich, National Football Conference, Near field communication, new technologies, NFC payments, pretty good, privacy, Product Release, Technology Internet, upcoming version, web site

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