Design: What are the best resources for learning bleeding-edge web, UI and UX design?
- Studying psychology and HCI (behavior and perception)
- Studying art and industrial design (interfaces)
- Studying anthropology and sociology
- Studying popular culture
- Studying the virtual and physical environments of your target audience
The “resource” is experience and knowledge of human behavior, our visual and tactile senses, our emotional response mechanisms, cultural norms for our age groups (do we trust banks? what do i define as “private”? do i know how to use a digital camera?), and so on. Anybody with a pirated copy of photoshop and a few Top 10 tutorials can make the pixels that sit on top of your engineering pretty, but user experience, and the interface with which your users interact, isn’t something that comes from an O’Reilly’s book or Sitepoint article.
If there is one single book I will recommend, it is this:
Thoughtful Interaction Design: A Design Perspective on Information Technology. MIT Press, 2004
http://www.amazon.com/Thoughtful…
But do not expect it to have all the answers you seek…It’s just the first book I recommend to people learning how to design with empathy.
Design: What are the best resources for learning bleeding-edge web, UI and UX design?
The websites that exhibit bleeding-edge UI and UX design. Learn to love Firebug/Web Inspector and discovering how they do it. Most likely, the people making those sites will eventually write a book, but by the time it’s out there’s someone else who surpassed them again. The websites themselves are often the best resource to learn from.
How do you take notes at speed?
One of the things that I’ve quickly found out when doing usability testing and field studies is that it’s hard to keep up with the pace of what’s going on and take sufficient notes.
How do you cope with this? Do you write in…
Is Microsoft’s Ribbon UI really that great, from a usability perspective?
The first time I ever used it was at my current job. Among my co-workers, the feelings toward it for usability are mixed. The other developer doesn’t really care one way or the other, as long as Office does everything he need…
Is Microsoft’s Ribbon UI really that great, from a usability perspective?
The first time I ever used it was at my current job. Among my co-workers, the feelings toward it for usability are mixed. The other developer doesn’t really care one way or the other, as long as Office does everything he need…