August 5, 2014

Developers and their users

Just in case you thought: “the developer is not the user“, so get to know them!

May 7, 2014

Overview of car UIs

Geoff Teehan has summarized car UIs of the past, present and maybe future.
I think we can get much better in designing pleasurable car UIs.

via Interaction-Design.org @ Facebook.com

April 21, 2014

Designers, developers, users: different views

Anthony Langsworth is talking about different theoretical layers of (game vs. enterprise) software, thereby referencing an interesting paper.

November 14, 2013

UXD, IA, UI, IXD

Lauri Laineste defines UXD, IA, UI, and IXD in short as can be seen at userflow.tumblr.com and to which I agree.

November 1, 2013

Try Windows 1.01 (1985)

Try by yourself: Windows 1.01 emulated in Browser.

Interesting to see some HCI designs which didn’t become extinct until now, e.g. menus and the cursor. OK, right now we live in a changing HCI world but do not forget the origins.

via windowsdeveloper.de

February 7, 2012

Design then develop HMIs

Recently I changed the title of this blog because I want to broaden the spectrum of articles in this blog from mainly technology oriented (HMI – Human Machine Interface) to add a bit of a psychological point of view (UX – User Experience). These are topics I’m interested in and so I’m reading a lot and want to write about them.

When we discover UX we have to do some design for web pages, in industrial sector and so on. Cameron Koczon wrote an interesting article at alistapart.com where he argues that it is An Important Time for Design. As he says there are too few startups with designers in a partner role rather than a required appendix or even no designers at all. In my point of view the output is primarily driven by developers and their technology and only “The products that take design seriously and incorporate it from the start are going to be the ones that connect with people in a way that really makes an impact in the world.

We need to have some designers on board who knows how people perceive, interprete the informations and act based on that. So designers have to analyze user groups, e.g. build personas on that and extract user needs with this technique. Or let them do user interviews to gather what users really need or want to change. To get the most usability problems out of your product you only need five test users as Jakob Nielsen says. But “zero users give zero insights“. (Actually there may be a distinction between a user experience researcher and a designer but I’m considering both jobs in designer in this article.) Furthermore startups (beside all other companies) need to have designers to transform this knowledge into real prototypes in an iterative way so that the products will become more useful and hopefully more emotionally touching. Because emotions are the big part of UX, they connect people to technology – to products. Developers instead often think in functions which can cause bad user emotions which in turn are able to disconnect user and product. So let’s make an impact in the world – with designers and developers at eye level.