Pinboard (robertogreco)
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recent bookmarks from robertogrecoDesigning Friction2024-02-14T19:58:47+00:00
https://designingfriction.com/
robertogrecolunamaurer roelwouters alexandrabarancová friction design internet web online resistance slow technology digital senses humanism humanness experience ui ux interaction convenience immediacy effort predictability autonomy ai artificialintelligence miriamrasch discomfort comfort instantgratification boredom flow pace bodies positivity negativity smoothness disagreement behavior via:daniellucashttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:7bd06f9ea637/Upgrade 496: 40th Anniversary of the Mac Draft - YouTube2024-01-24T22:44:45+00:00
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNebqs-oPUg
robertogrecomac osx macos finder bbedit filemaker sofware hardware 1984 laptops computers computing terminal history nostalgia danmoren johngruber johnsiracusa shellybrisbin stephenhackett unix ui dashboard imac ibook macbooks safari internet web online apple desktops accessories trackpads devices keyboardshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:ec8a732f0dde/Quill: the E-Ink UI framework2023-11-07T07:36:28+00:00
https://www.quill-ui.com/
robertogrecodevelopment eink interface ui ebookshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:b309b02b8d2a/Why Camera Makers Will Be Dead (Soonish) – On my Om2023-08-29T14:03:09+00:00
https://om.co/2023/08/28/why-camera-makers-will-be-dead/
robertogrecocameras photography ommalik 2023 software ux ui ricoh ricohgr ricohgr3 ricohgriiihttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:daee8e3df046/Opinion | The Book I Wish Every Policymaker Would Read - The New York Times2023-06-18T20:55:03+00:00
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/06/opinion/ezra-klein-podcast-jennifer-pahlka.html
robertogreco2023 jenniferpahlka exraklein government policy implementation governance bureaucracy jeffreypressman aaronwildavsky hilarycottam leadership politics pauldans stevengroves codeforamerica accountability publicservants checklists process compliance paperwork paperworkreductionact forms application ui ux userresearch digital competence capacityhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:28744643cd32/Apple transformed the iPhone 10 years ago with iOS 7 — and we’re still feeling it today - The Verge2023-06-04T18:30:08+00:00
https://www.theverge.com/2023/6/2/23745728/apple-iphone-ios-7-transformed-10-years-ago
robertogrecoapple iphone ios7 smartphones design ui 2013 2023 ioshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:dd088a07b1f4/The Computer is a Feeling2023-05-28T00:11:02+00:00
https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1QbPa3URLo5cp07bi6U-vTFjX_4btORAlwSnSRxEapsk/mobilebasic
robertogrecocomputers computing timhwang omarrizwan personalcomputers internet smartphones 2023 via:justinpickard hardware software coding devices objects culture feeligns operatingsystems programming experience ux ui networking networkedcomputing papercraft interface interfaces guihttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:90ac628148fe/HandsOn: Touching the Digital Planet | Society for Cultural Anthropology2022-12-11T21:46:03+00:00
https://culanth.org/fieldsights/series/handson-touching-the-digital-planet
robertogrecohands senses allthesenses 2022 via:justinpickard fingers bodies digital palms krishnenduray stinerybråten cloudberries trygvebeyerbroch donkulick tuvabeyerbroch lenoremanderson annemeneley saibavarma marieheřmanová aalyiasadruddin anna-mariawalter digitalization hirofumukatsuno nefissanaguib food sports southafrica capetown norway berries time prague rwanda smartphones osaka japan zanzibar handball skiiing braces swiping scrolling ux ui interaction tactile portugal weather touch texturehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:977ea03540f3/Typographics 2017: Uncharacteristic Characters with Jonathan Hoefler - YouTube2022-08-25T14:37:19+00:00
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KUqtEJ9U-e8
robertogrecojonathanhoefler 2017 typography design fonts graphicdesign maps mapping dictionaries ui typefaces lexicography words meaning meaningmaking lettering lamguage communication charlesschultz peanuts snoopy charliebrown edwardgorey text howwewrite italics blackletter script calligraphy sketching context style comics writing dialog conversationhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:8acf181b7886/Amber Case, 2021 Mozilla Fellow | Cool Tools2021-10-09T18:50:33+00:00
https://kk.org/cooltools/amber-case-2021-mozilla-fellow/
robertogrecoambercase technology lightswitches cooltools footpedals unlockprotocol abletonsoftware 2021 protocols play web internet keyfobs keys cars sound audio software ui ux abletonlive softwaredevelopment music listening perfection perfectionism time persistencehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:8a43aeb4a0ac/Tailwind CSS - Rapidly build modern websites without ever leaving your HTML.2020-11-21T19:55:48+00:00
https://tailwindcss.com/
robertogrecocss framework opensource ui webdev webdesignhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:424d900cd1d0/Mercury2020-06-19T00:42:52+00:00
https://www.mercuryos.com/
robertogrecoos ui ux computing jasonyuan dennisjin design speculativedesignhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:4234e5ecf6da/Computer Utopias — RISD Graphic Design2020-05-26T22:19:15+00:00
http://chrisnovello.com/teaching/risd/computer-utopias/
robertogrecocomputers computing culture technology risd chrisnovello mobile smartphones cameras bretvictor donnaharaway gregborenstein benedictevans ai artificialintelligence deeplearning stevejurvetson nataliehammel lorraineyurshansky andrewng liatclark alankay adelegoldberg laurasydell chrisgranger coding programming hypercard quinnnorton ulikuster paulford caseyneistat christse marymeeker dangrover pasqualed'silva ui ux mapile applications software snapchat facebook nathanjurgenson brianfeldman bradtroemel syllabus sherryturkle andrewwatts howwthink communication irl photography video californianideology tadfriend leslieberlin jilllepore paulgraham samaltman miyatokumitsu sarahlacy jessicalivingston startups siliconvalley capitalism networks chrisdixon johnherrman karenweise kevinsystrom internet online web a16z conniechan jonathanlibov ianbogost stevenlevy notifications text sms texting messaging chaimgingold annaanthropy janemcgonigal ceciliad'anastasio videogames games gaming dylanmarron fionaraby anthonydunnehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:3e0742580186/iorama.studio: looom2020-04-09T17:47:26+00:00
https://iorama.studio/
robertogrecoios ipad animation applications ipados iphone looom uihttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:a81b152c4b0c/Yap2020-01-23T23:51:31+00:00
https://yap.chat/
robertogrecochat socialmedia webapp ephemeral conversation fun onlinetoolkit ui uxhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:3719cdca8694/The UX design case of closed captions for everyone // Sebastian Greger2019-03-30T19:29:49+00:00
https://sebastiangreger.net/2019/02/ux-closed-captions-for-everybody/
robertogrecoAfter seeing several photos my (English-speaking, non-deaf) friends have taken of their TV screens over the past week, I’m realizing that many of you watch TV with closed captions (or subtitles) on?! Is this a thing? And if so, why?
The 150+ replies (I guess this qualifies as a reasonable sample for a qualitative analysis of sorts?) are a wonderful example of “accessibility features” benefiting everybody (I wrote about another instance recently [https://sebastiangreger.net/2018/11/twitter-alt-texts-on-db-trains/ ]). The reasons why people watch TV with closed captions on, despite having good hearing abilities and not being constrained by having to watch muted video, are manifold and go far beyond those two most commonly anticipated use cases.
[image: Close-up image of a video with subtitles (caption: "Closed captions are used by people with good hearing and audio playback turned on. An overseen use case?")]
Even applying a rather shallow, ex-tempore categorisation exercise based on the replies on Twitter, I end up with an impressive list to start with:
• Permanent difficulties with audio content
◦ audio processing disorders
◦ short attention span (incl., but not limited to clinical conditions)
◦ hard of hearing, irrespective of age
• Temporary impairments of hearing or perception
◦ watching under the influence of alcohol
◦ noise from eating chips while watching
• Environmental/contextual factors
◦ environment noise from others in the room (or a snoring dog)
◦ distractions and multitasking (working out, child care, web browsing, working, phone calls)
• Reasons related to the media itself
◦ bad audio levels of voice vs. music
• Enabler for improved understanding
◦ easier to follow dialogue
◦ annoyance with missing dialogue
◦ avoidance of misinterpretations
◦ better appreciation of dialogue
• Better access to details
◦ able to take note of titles of songs played
◦ ability to understand song lyrics
◦ re-watching to catch missed details
• Language-related reasons
◦ strong accents
◦ fast talking, mumbling
◦ unable to understand foreign language
◦ insecurity with non-native language
• Educational goals, learning and understanding
◦ language learning
◦ literacy development for children
◦ seeing the spelling of unknown words/names
◦ easier memorability of content read (retainability)
• Social reasons
◦ courtesy to others, either in need for silence or with a need/preference for subtitles
◦ presence of pets or sleeping children
◦ avoiding social conflict over sound level or distractions (“CC = family peace”)
• Media habits
◦ ability to share screen photos with text online
• Personal preferences
◦ preference for reading
◦ acquired habit
• Limitations of technology skills
◦ lack of knowledge of how to turn them off
An attempt at designerly analysis
The reasons range from common sense to surprising, such as the examples of closed captions used to avoid family conflict or the two respondents explicitly mentioning “eating chips” as a source of disturbing noise. Motivations mentioned repeatedly refer to learning and/or understanding, but also such apparently banal reasons like not knowing how to turn them off (a usability issue?). Most importantly, though, it becomes apparent that using CC is more often than not related to choice/preference, rather than to impairment or restraints from using audio.
At the same time, it becomes very clear that not everybody likes them, especially when forced to watch with subtitles by another person. The desire/need of some may negatively affect the experience of others present. A repeat complaint that, particularly with comedy, CC can kill the jokes may also hint at the fact that subtitles and their timing could perhaps be improved by considering them as more than an accessibility aid for those who would not hear the audio? (It appears as if the scenario of audio and CC consumed simultaneously is not something considered when subtitles are created and implemented; are we looking at another case for “exclusive design”?)
And while perceived as distracting when new – this was the starting point of Kottke’s Tweet – many of the comments share the view that it becomes less obtrusive over time; people from countries where TV is not dubbed in particular are so used to it they barely notice it (“becomes second nature”). Yet, there are even such interesting behaviours like people skipping back to re-read a dialogue they only listened to at first, as well as that of skipping back to be able to pay better attention to the picture at second view (e.g. details of expression) after reading the subtitles initially.
Last but not least, it is interesting how people may even feel shame over using CC. Only a conversation like the cited Twitter thread may help them realise that it is much more common than they thought. And most importantly that it has nothing to do with a perceived stigmatisation of being “hard of hearing”.
CC as part of video content design
The phenomenon is obviously not new. Some articles on the topic suggest that it is a generational habit [https://medium.com/s/the-upgrade/why-gen-z-loves-closed-captioning-ec4e44b8d02f ] of generation Z (though Kottke’s little survey proves the contrary), or even sees [https://www.wired.com/story/closed-captions-everywhere/ ] it as paranoid and obsessive-compulsive behaviour of “postmodern completists” as facilitated by new technological possibilities. Research on the benefits of CC for language learning, on the other hand, reaches back [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/19388078909557984 ] several decades.
No matter what – the phenomenon in itself is interesting enough to make this a theme for deeper consideration in any design project that contains video material. Because, after all, one thing is for sure: closed captions are not for those with hearing impairments or with muted devices alone – and to deliver great UX, these users should be considered as well."
[See also: https://kottke.org/19/04/why-everyone-is-watching-tv-with-closed-captioning-on-these-days ]]]>closedcaptioning subtitles closedcaptions text reading genz generationz audio video tv film dialogue listening howweread 2019 sebastiangreger literacy language languages ux ui television ocd attention adhd languagelearning learning howwelearn processing hearing sound environment parenting media multimedia clarity accents memory memorization children distractions technology classideas zoomershttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:861800781312/Gradients are everywhere from Facebook to the New York Times - Vox2019-03-02T22:02:43+00:00
https://www.vox.com/the-goods/2019/3/1/18241592/gradients-facebook-coachella-daily-fading-pastel-design-trend
robertogrecocolor gradients design socialmedia jamesturrell 2019 light space perception neon desig graphicdesign ux ui wolfgangtillmans nickcope meditation colors tatipastukhova artechouse computing bisexuallighting lighting queer knowyourmeme pink purple blue cyberpunk future technology hightechnology lowtechnology vaporwave bladerunner ghostintheshell blackmirror sanjunipero hotlinebling kerryflynn facebook microsoftpaint rionharmon sunsets california socal losangeles coachella depthperception ganzfelds drake kanyewest beyoncé anagraph ladygaga daisyaliotohttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:9db5dd1a23e7/New American Outline 12019-02-14T23:55:28+00:00
https://urcad.es/writing/new-american-outline/
robertogrecoédouardurcades mirrors interfaces ui ux cameras stories instagram storytelling reality 2019 snapchat multimedia media kevinsystrom format form newness technology smartphones mobile phones images imagery buttons jadensmith lukaswinklerprinshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:d506447d8876/Scratching the Surface — 104. Cab Broskoski and Chris Sherron2019-01-11T20:22:24+00:00
http://scratchingthesurface.fm/post/181237427850/104-cab-broskoski-and-chris-sherron
robertogrecojarrettfuller are.na cabbroskoski chrissherron coreyarcangel del.icio.us bookmarkling pinterest cv tagging flickr michaelcina youworkforthem davidbohm williamgibson digital damonzucconi stanleykubrick stephaniesnt julianbozeman public performance collections collecting research 2000s interview information internet web sharing conversation art design socialmedia socialnetworking socialnetworks online onlinetoolkit inspiration moodboards graphicdesign graphics images web2.0 webdesign webdev ui ux scratchingthesurface education teaching edtech technology multidisciplinary generalists creative creativitysingapore creativegeneralists learning howwelearn attention interdisciplinary crossdisciplinary crosspollination algorithms canon knowledge transdisciplinary tools archives slow slowweb slowinternet instagram facebookhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:ecbeefb34cac/new american interfaces a, Open Sesam2018-11-20T00:38:55+00:00
https://soundcloud.com/opensesam/new-american-interfaces-a
robertogrecointerface facebook instagram snapchat design format video 2018 interfaces ux ui édouardurcades surfing surfoboards california computers computing origins siliconvalley tumblr linux visual standardshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:b4eff4d8b2f4/Scratching the Surface — 88. Dan Hill2018-08-15T17:01:09+00:00
http://scratchingthesurface.fm/post/177011550585/88-dan-hill
robertogrecojarrettfuller danhill 2018 scratchingthesurface strategicdesign design helsinkidesignlab servicedesign strelka urban urbanism cities bryanboyer fabric sociology jonthanraban rebeccasolnit gilliantett stanleymcchrystal leonardkoren stewartbrand howbuildingslearn roryhyde arup designeducation education autodidacts writing architecture interactiondesign ui ux generalists learning howwelearn ideo designthinking howwethink cv careers certification context interdisciplinary transdisciplinary multidisciplinary scale systems fabricshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:877705ee485e/The iPad as a fast, precise tool for creativity – UX Collective2018-07-03T23:32:30+00:00
https://uxdesign.cc/the-ipad-as-a-fast-precise-tool-for-creativity-21384ea18659
robertogrecoipad ipadpro creativity applications ui ux glyphs input stylus 2018 juliaroggatz milošmilikić adamwigginshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:cdc6fabc4aac/Why cards are the future of the web - Inside Intercom2017-09-25T05:30:21+00:00
https://blog.intercom.com/why-cards-are-the-future-of-the-web/
robertogrecocards web webdesign webdev userinterface ux userexperience ui design mobile pauladamshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:924bf970acbf/Redditors design worst volume sliders possible – Designer News2017-06-10T06:08:19+00:00
https://www.designernews.co/stories/84443-redditors-design-worst-volume-sliders-possible
robertogrecoux ui design humor 2017https://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:44fb937b0a80/Books that have shaped our thinking – Nava PBC2017-05-29T20:24:47+00:00
https://blog.navapbc.com/books-that-have-shaped-our-thinking-5d8be6f505ee
robertogrecoThis covers, in great detail, the astounding ways that the models we make for the world end up influencing how we interact with it. This is incredibly relevant to our work: the data models we define and the way we classify and interpret data have profound and often invisible impacts on large populations. — Sha Hwang, Co-founder and Head of Creative
Decoded
by Jay Z
Decoded is Jay Z’s autobiography and describes his experience as a black man growing up in an impoverished neighborhood in NYC. In particular, there is a passage about poor people’s relationship to the government that changed the way I think about the perception of those government services that I work to improve. This book showed me that the folks we usually want to serve most well in government, are the ones who are most likely to have had profoundly negative experiences with government. It taught me that, when I work on government services, I am rebuilding a relationship, not starting a new one. Context is so important. It’s a fun, fast read and I used to ask that our Apprentices read at least that passage, if not the whole book, before starting with our team at the NYC Mayor’s Office. — Genevieve Gaudet, Designer
Seeing like a State
by James C. Scott
A reminder that the governance of people at scale can have unintended consequences when removed from people’s daily lives and needs. You won’t think of the grid, property lines, and last names the same way again.— Shelly Ni, Designer
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking
by Susan Cain
Cain uses data and real world examples of how and why introverts are overlooked in American culture and then discusses how both introverts and extroverts can play a role in ensuring introverts get a seat at the table and a word in the conversation. — Aimee Barciauskas, Software Engineer
Capital in the Twenty-First Century
by Thomas Piketty
This book analyzes the long-term fluctuations in wealth inequality across the globe, from the eighteenth century to present. He exposes an incredibly important issue in a compelling way, using references not just to data, but to history and literature to prove his point. — Mari Miyachi, Software Engineer
Master of the Senate: The Years of Lyndon Johnson III
by Robert A. Caro
Our most underhanded president also brought us Medicaid, Medicare, and civil rights. Was Machiavelli so bad after all? — Alex Prokop, Software Engineer
Praying for Sheetrock
by Melissa Fay Greene
A true, close-up story of McIntosh County, Georgia, a place left behind by the greater Civil Rights movement of the 1960s. This is a story about the civil rights movement that shakes up the community in the 1970s, and this is also a story about burnout, and organizing, and intergenerational trauma. — Shelly Ni, Designer
The Healing of America: A Global Quest for Better, Cheaper, and Fairer Health Care
by T. R. Reid
Reid explores different models for healthcare in nations across the globe. He’s searching for an understanding of why America’s system is comparatively so expensive and unsuccessful, leaving so many uninsured and unhealthy. There is a great chapter on Ayurvedic medicine which (spoiler alert) seemed to work for the author when he was suffering from a shoulder injury! — Aimee Barciauskas, Software Engineer
Creativity, Inc: Overcoming the Unseen Forces That Stand in the Way of True Inspiration
by Ed Catmull and Amy Wallace
A very enjoyable and inspirational read about the history of Pixar from founder Ed Catmull himself. It delves into what sets a creative company apart and teaches lessons like “people are more important than ideas” and “simple answers are seductive” without reading like a typical business book.— Lauren Peterson, Product Manager
Thinking, Fast and Slow
by Daniel Kahneman
The magnum opus of Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman. Kahneman is a psychologist but his Nobel is in Economics, and unlike other winners in this category, his win stands the test of time. You will be a much better decision maker after reading this book and understanding the two modes our brains work in: System 1 intuitive “fast” thinking and System 2 deliberate “slow” thinking. It is a beast of a book, but unlike the vast majority of (pop) psychology books, this book distills decades of groundbreaking research and is the basis for so many other psychology books and research that if you read this book carefully, you won’t have to read those other books. There are so many topics in this book, I’ll just link to the Wikipedia page to give you a flavor.— Alicia Liu, Software Engineer
Nudge
by Richard H. Thaler and Cass R. Sunstein
This covers how sensible “choice architecture” can improve the decisions and behavior of people. Much of what’s covered comes from decades of research in behavioral science and economics, and has a wide range of applications — from design, user research, and policy to business and everyday life. — Sawyer Hollenshead, Designer
The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right
by Atul Gawande
This book is about how checklists can help even experts avoid mistakes. Experience isn’t enough. I try to apply the lessons of this book to the processes we use to operate our software.—Evan Kroske, Software Engineer
The Soul of a New Machine
by Tracy Kidder
This book details the work of a computer engineering team racing to design a computer. While the pace of work for the team is certainly unsustainable and perhaps even unhealthy at times, the highs and lows they go through as they debug their new minicomputer will be familiar to engineers and members of tight-knit groups of all varieties. The rush to finish their project, which was thought to be a dark horse at the beginning of the book, is enthralling and will keep you engaged with this book late into the night. — Samuel Keller, Software Engineer
Release It!: Design and Deploy Production-Ready Software
by Michael T. Nygard
One of the best, most practical books I’ve ever read about creating resilient software on “modern” web architectures. While it may not be the most relevant with regards to cloud-based infrastructure, the patterns and processes described within are still very applicable. This is one of the few technical books I have read cover-to-cover. — Scott Smith, Software Engineer
Design for Democracy
by Marcia Lausen
From an AIGA project to improve the design of ballots— both paper and electronic— following the “hanging chad” drama of the 2000 election, comes this review of best practices for designers, election officials, and anyone interested in the intersection of design and voting.—Shelly Ni, Designer
The Design of Everyday Things
by Donald A. Norman
This is a classic for learning about design and its sometimes unintended consequences. I read it years ago and I still think about it every time I’m in an elevator. It’s a great introduction to a designer’s responsibility and designing in the real world for actual humans, who can make mistakes and surprising choices about how to use the designs you create. — Genevieve Gaudet, Designer
More recommendations from the team
• The Unexotic Underclass
• Open Government: Collaboration, Transparency, and Participation in Practice
• Everybody Hurts: Content for Kindness
• Poverty Interrupted: Applying Behavioral Science to the Context of Chronic Scarcity [PDF]
• Designing for Social Change: Strategies for Community-Based Graphic Design
• Making Comics: Storytelling Secrets of Comics, Manga, and Graphic Novels
• The New New Journalism: Conversations with America’s Best Nonfiction Writers on their Craft
• The Furious Improvisation: How the WPA and a Cast of Thousands Made High Art out of Desperate Times
• The Effective Engineer: How to Leverage Your Efforts In Software Engineering to Make a Disproportionate and Meaningful Impact
• Effective DevOps: Building a Culture of Collaboration, Affinity, and Tooling at Scale"]]>nava books booklists design education health healthcare sawyerhollenshed jayz susanleighstar shahwang geoffreybowker decoded jamescscott seeinglikeastate susancain introverts quiet thomaspiketty economics melissafaygreene civilrrights socialjustice creativity edcatmull amyallace pixar teams readinglists toread howwethink thinking danielkahneman government richardthaler casssunstein atulgawande tracykidder medicine checklists process michaelnygard software ui ux democracy donalnorman devops improvisation collaboration sfsh journalism kindness socialchange transparency participation participatory opengovernment openhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:ca18140cd564/Sara Wachter-Boettcher | Talk: Design for Real Life2016-09-03T22:57:45+00:00
http://www.sarawb.com/2016/09/02/design-for-real-life-talk/
robertogrecobias diversity inclusion inclusivity sarawachter-boettcher 2016 ui ux interface design testing standardization standardizedtesting sathttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:9cac2ca25878/Dark Patterns are designed to trick you (and they’re all over the Web) | Ars Technica2016-07-28T22:55:30+00:00
http://arstechnica.com/security/2016/07/dark-patterns-are-designed-to-trick-you-and-theyre-all-over-the-web/
robertogrecoui dishonesty design ux darkpatterns internet webdev interface webdesignhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:358f6aa7068d/SXSW Keynote - "You Know What? Fuck Dropdowns." - YouTube2016-07-23T05:41:02+00:00
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hcYAHix-riY
robertogrecodropdowns webdev web design goldenkrishna ericcampbell 2p16 via:nicolefenton ui webdesignhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:6ccccf75804d/Design Is Mainly About Empathy — Track Changes2016-07-20T17:22:18+00:00
https://trackchanges.postlight.com/design-is-mainly-about-empathy-c9d51ccb208a#.lhys0cuuy
robertogrecoComputer literacy is a euphemism for forcing human beings to stretch their thinking to understand the inner workings of application logic, rather than having software-enabled products stretch to meet people’s usual ways of thinking.
Let’s take a closer look at those three methods. Alan Cooper tackles all three in the seminal About Face: The Essentials of Interaction Design.
The first one is the user’s mental model. Cooper writes that a lot of people think “electricity flows like water from the wall into the appliances through the little black tube of the electrical cord” when they plug in their vacuum or computer.
Of course, the electricity doesn’t flow like water at all. In the real world, electricity’s implementation model is much more complex. But a simpler view of electricity works just fine for most of us. It’s informative enough to help us understand, for example, that we need to cram a cord into an outlet to charge our computer.
Finally, the represented model is the way the thing ends up looking to the user. This is the part the designer spends their time working on, and the part that people will actually touch.
Here’s the secret for the designer, again from Cooper:
“The closer the represented model comes to the user’s mental model, the easier he will find the application to use and understand.”
Bravo! For a designer, that might mean spending more time talking to users, and less time digging through the API. It might mean that early design phases are better spent researching user psychology instead of tinkering with typography.
The user’s mental model, faulty though it may be, is our guiding light. If we don’t invest effort in understanding that model, it’s going to be really hard to know if our work is successful. Design is mainly about empathy.
Example time. Animation is a great tool for practicing user empathy. Animation is a user interface pattern for aligning a user’s mental model with the product’s represented model. The notifications menu in iOS 9 isn’t physically tucked up underneath the top of the device on a curtain roll, and everyone knows that. But users have mental models of tugging on objects in their world from the near the top to reveal a new temporary state.
[two GIFs (one of blinds, one of the notifications pane in iOS being opened by swiping from the top) captioned "Blinds image courtesy IKEA"]
The thing that’s special about the represented model—Cooper helped me see this—is that it’s the only part a designer can control. We can’t control the implementation model, because a good engineer will use abstractions in the codebase to make it maintainable and safe. And we can’t control our user’s mental model, since it’s shaped by their culture and dozens of other unknowable factors.
As designers, we have the power to manipulate representations. Design is the process of making our users feel awesome by representing the software in a way that meets them where they are."]]>design ux alancooper richardfeynmann teaching empathy explanation 2016 neilrenicker representation ui mentalmodels abstractionhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:b7900f5bf405/UNCHARTED 4: A Thief's End - A New Adventure in Video Game Accessibility Video | PS4 - YouTube2016-07-18T16:55:43+00:00
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ls_CD4mB42s
robertogrecoaccessibility videogames games gaming ui ux 2016 sony ps4 emiliaschatz alexneonakishttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:1ca2edaf7a26/Full Thoughts on Pokemon Go from my interview on The Verge — Medium2016-07-17T19:55:36+00:00
https://medium.com/@helvetica/full-thoughts-on-pokemon-go-from-my-interview-on-the-verge-178b97b1112b
robertogrecovi:tealtan pokemongo 2016 games gaming play interface ux learning howelearn howweplay videogames andrewwebster ramiismail ashervollmer zachgage ar design ui snapchat srg edg gamedesign zpd howwelearn exploration pokémongo augmentedrealityhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:be9d114e893a/Ghost in the machine: Snapchat isn’t mobile-first — it’s something else entirely — Free Code Camp2016-07-11T05:06:57+00:00
https://medium.freecodecamp.com/ghost-in-the-machine-snapchat-isnt-mobile-first-it-s-something-else-entirely-4f6c265152a2#.npz73cdiz
robertogrecosnapchat benbasche 2016 photography susansontag mobile mobilefirst twitter facebook instagram experience socialmedia smartphones uber authenticallymobile evanspiegel nathanjurgenson cameras feeds ar augmentedreality design ux ui mediahttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:49d3ebb25309/The Problem With Flat Design, According To A UX Expert | Co.Design | business + design2016-03-27T22:36:28+00:00
https://www.fastcodesign.com/3058094/the-problem-with-flat-design-according-to-a-ux-expert
robertogrecodesign flatdesign ui ux microsoft katemeyer 2016https://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:3318834e120b/Microsoft's Radical Bet On A New Type Of Design Thinking | Co.Design | business + design2016-03-27T21:58:37+00:00
https://www.fastcodesign.com/3054927/the-big-idea/microsofts-inspiring-bet-on-a-radical-new-type-of-design-thinking
robertogrecodisability microsoft design conversationalui accessibility 2016 augustdelosreyes cortana siri googlenow katholmes ux ui interface juttatreviranus allensayegh julielarson-green albertshum stayanadella normal inclusivedesign incluive inclusivity disabilitieshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:660cb3ccfee6/The Future of Chat Isn’t AI — Medium2016-03-07T00:21:23+00:00
https://medium.com/@tedlivingston/the-future-of-chat-isn-t-ai-b07f65bc252#.62loxkejc
robertogreco Scan > 2 > Bud > **** 0345. Done."
…
"To be clear, this is just the beginning of the bots era, and there are many developments to come. The leaders in this space — Kik, WeChat, Line, Facebook, Slack, and Telegram — all have their own ideas about how this is all going to play out. But one thing I think we can all agree on is that chat is going to be the world’s next great operating system: a Bot OS (or, as we like to call it, BOS).
These developments open up new and giant opportunities for consumers, developers, and businesses. Chat apps will come to be thought of as the new browsers; bots will be the new websites. This is the beginning of a new internet."]]>chat ai artificialintelligence 2016 tedlivingston kik slack telegram facebook ui ux interface api wechat bots qrcodeshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:6a16a60a3f50/Popular versus Brilliant | Designers + Geeks2016-02-21T23:38:19+00:00
http://www.designersandgeeks.com/events/popular-versus-brilliant
robertogrecojimbbull californiadesign siliconvalley 2016 branding reverence generic popularity brilliance apple uber medium california graphicdesign webdesign movingbrands productdesign sameness webrococo benetton olivierotoscani tiborkalman design business california-zation homogenization designeducation art differentiation ui ux screens magicleap ar augmentedreality virtualreality packaging vr webdevhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:b2bc58181cd9/Dan Grover | More Chinese Mobile UI Trends2016-02-18T04:31:38+00:00
http://dangrover.com/blog/2016/01/31/more-chinese-mobile-ui-trends.html
robertogrecoui design mobile china dangrover interfacehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:6b581d7712a2/Bite-size pieces2016-02-15T22:28:27+00:00
http://glusman.blogspot.com/2010/02/malcovich-bias-over-years-ive-noticed.html
robertogrecodesign film internet productdesign psychology storytelling difference ux ui usabilitytesting usability 2010 andresglusmanhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:a130dddc7fec/It’s here: Quartz’s first news app for iPhone - Quartz2016-02-13T20:19:18+00:00
http://qz.com/613700/its-here-quartzs-first-news-app-for-iphone/
robertogrecoui ux chat interface quartz applications ios news interaction via:caseygollan conversationaluihttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:a2dc87c5e926/How those coming online interact and view technology (with tweets) · jonathanshariat · Storify2016-02-09T07:04:54+00:00
https://storify.com/jonathanshariat/greate
robertogrecoui ux elderly aging age mobile phones smartphones online internaction technology 2015 learning condescension howwelearn howweteach passwords spam affection communication whatsapp relationships patience memes etiquette reputation expectations motivation content communities community care guidance internet empowerment intenthttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:ab5229e8489c/The Future of Video Is a Wonderful Mess -- Following: How We Live Online2016-02-03T03:04:52+00:00
http://nymag.com/following/2016/01/future-of-video-is-a-wonderful-mess.html
robertogrecovideo web online future messiness myspace aesthetics facebook gifs geocities webrococo snapchat twitter socialmedia netflix hulu twitch minecraft ui hud annotations tumblr instagram brainfeldman multiliteracieshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:ada916921bf3/Caroline Sinders2016-02-01T01:10:51+00:00
http://carolinesinders.com/
robertogrecocarolinesinders via:ablerism ux ui interaction design twitter instagram apis research digital digitalculture digitalbranding digitalimaging machinelearning systemsdesign empathy bots humanintervention algorithmshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:132a8986c9a2/Motion with Meaning: Semantic Animation in Interface Design · An A List Apart Article2016-01-24T01:15:56+00:00
http://alistapart.com/article/motion-with-meaning-semantic-animation-in-interface-design
robertogrecoanimaition ui interface ux design tobiasbernard aminalhazwani via:litherlandhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:e66e51b676b7/Desktop Neo – rethinking the desktop interface for productivity.2016-01-23T18:26:07+00:00
http://www.desktopneo.com/
robertogrecodesign desktop interface mobile ui lennartziburskihttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:8b4a14f6845a/May-Li Khoe - Layers 2015 on Vimeo2016-01-21T08:04:22+00:00
https://vimeo.com/151277883
robertogrecomay-likhoe design humility 2015 prototyping iteration notknowing publicamateurs learning ui ux apple hypercard billatkinson designresearch khanacademy arrogance education pedagogy gamedesign listening confidencehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:bfc055646cc7/Figma: the collaborative interface design tool.2015-12-08T06:23:48+00:00
https://www.figma.com/
robertogrecofigma collaboration design tools ui webdev appdev applications interfacedesign webdesign layout self-publishing publishing selfpublishinghttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:0b919fd0765a/The Challenge of Digital Patina | Project Evolution2015-10-24T21:04:53+00:00
http://www.projectevolution.com/activity/challenge-digital-patina/
robertogrecoWe talk about Patina as sheen – a thing that changes appearance over time. That change can be damaging, or it can give an object more value. It does this by demonstrating what it’s been through. In the case of a pair of jeans, it’s the little rip, the pen mark, the small hole that’s been repaired in the pocket. In chinese cooking, a wok is seasoned to make it non-stick. A well seasoned pan will go beyond simply making the pan non-stick. It will impart flavour to the food in what the Chinese call ‘wok hey’, or ‘breath of wok’. You see, to me, Patina is more than surface level sheen, or the aging of something. It’s the flavour. It’s an individual ‘taste’ that can only come from that thing.
Now the idea of “wok-hey” might be a bit too much to think about right now. Where do we take that idea when we talk about applications? Should our Yahoo account started in 1999 have a different flavor in its messages than someone else’s shiny new Gmail account? Are texts sent from your year-old smartphone imparted with a scratchy old-film quality? That might be taking things too far. What I like is the idea that our actions and the way in which we use an application can leave a mark, a signature, of our use over time.
Why digital patina? Why is it important?
Well, I feel that what is missing in this digital age is the evidence that we are humans using a system, application, whatever… There is no way for us to leave a mark on the object that we use all the time. Sure, the phone itself imparts its own patina, but that’s it. Without patina, there is no history. Without history, there is very little attachment to the thing. It is much easier to throw out the teddy bear that your Aunt got you that you never quite liked and still looks brand new. It is much harder to get rid of the teddy bear that you loved, even if it is missing and eye and has a strange stain on one of its legs. That stain, those worn spots, that is our mark, proof that we have an effect on this world and that our love and constant use of an object takes a little of that objects perfection away from it, which makes us love it more.
Let me note that this is not a call for more and more skeuomorphism in UI design. The idea of digital patina can be applied to even the slickest, non-faux-anything UI design. What digital patina aims to do, I hope, is give the user a sense that they have left a mark on this digital object. That this object has a life and a history, and that history helps us make an emotional connection to it.
As an argument against skeuomorphism, I think this is a world where the visual cliches will soon be irrelevant. The kids picking up smartphones today don’t remember leather desk calendars, they never used a typewriter, they perhaps don’t even have a favorite, well worn novel. Their world could be full of shiny apps that never age, or degrade into bits to be left behind as a ghost of ones and zeros. They might not feel an attachment to their tools of communication, and therefore have very little need for an emotional attachment to objects. Objects, then, become just as forgettable and disposable as the applications on their home screens.
What I am talking about is surface details, I know. It seems to be the low-hanging fruit at the moment, while we think more about Mark Boulton’s challenge to impart “wok hey”. If we start down this path, though, and explore what it means to impact digital patina, than ways in which an application or digital object can have “wok hey” may become more apparent.
The age of digital objects moves rapidly, I know. Most people hang on to a smartphone or tablet for an average of a year before they upgrade. The maximum age may be around 2 years for most pieces of technology. The time in which individual applications are used may be very short, I also admit that. Admittedly, this “patina” would happen in a relatively short time frame. While this may seem like romanticism, what I trying to concentrate on is the connection between people and the objects they love and use every day. In some ways, digital patina might make people appreciate the “new and shiny” when they upgrade their device.
I for one, would prefer that we design a digital world that replicates the positive things about the real world and translates them in a new way. Leaving your mark, having objects that tell a story and have a history with you, that’s a positive thing."]]>digitalpatina patina digital beausage skeuomorphism jhogue 2012 ui ux design grahicdesign usage time slowhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:2d67836dbfdb/The Humane Representation of Thought on Vimeo2015-03-07T22:46:11+00:00
https://vimeo.com/115154289
robertogrecobretvictor towatch interactiondesign davidhellman hiroshiishii softrobotics robots robotics kenperlin jeromebruner howardgardner kieranegan edwinhutchins andyclark jjgibson embodiedcognition cognition writing math mathematics infographic visualization communication graphics graphicdesign design representation humans understanding howwelearn howwethink media digital dynamism movement conversation presentation reading howweread howwewrite chalktalk otherlab 3dprinting 3d materials physical tangibility depth learning canon ui informationdesign infographics maps mapping data thinking thoughts numbers algebra arithmetic notation williamplayfair cartography gestures placevalue periodictable michaelfaraday jamesclerkmaxell ideas print printing leibniz humanism humanerepresentation icons visual aural kinesthetic spatial tactile symbols iot internetofthings programming computers screens computation computing coding modeling exploration via:robertogreco reasoning rhetoric gerrysussman environments scale virtualizationhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:33f69b339106/Matt Jones: Jumping to the End -- Practical Design Fiction on Vimeo2015-03-06T06:36:23+00:00
https://vimeo.com/121072011
robertogrecomattjones berg berglondon google googlecreativelab interactiondesign scifi sciencefiction designfiction futurism speculativefiction julianbleecker howwework 1970s comics marvel marvelcomics 2001aspaceodyssey fiction speculation technology history umbertoeco design wernerherzog dansaffer storytelling stories microinteractions signaturemoments worldbuilding stanleykubrick details grain grammars computervision ai artificialintelligence ui personofinterest culture popculture surveillance networks productdesign canon communication johnthackara macroscopes howethink thinking context patternsensing systemsthinking systems mattrolandson objects buckminsterfuller normanfoster brianarthur advertising experiencedesign ux copywriting writing film filmmaking prototyping posters video howwewrite cognition language ara openstudioproject transdisciplinary crossdisciplinary interdisciplinary sketching time change seams seamlessnesshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:e724c9cd2d6a/Futures of text ["A survey of all the current innovation in text as a medium"] | Whoops by Jonathan Libov2015-03-03T01:25:11+00:00
http://whoo.ps/2015/02/23/futures-of-text
robertogrecotext texting chat sms messaging ui communication interface design gui lark quicktype sinaweibo alipay qq wechat qqhousekeeper weidan koudai facebook facebookmessenger talkto applications mobile luka chatgrape slack commandline bustime jonathanlibovhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:07a8276b3833/+300 Awesome Free Things for Entrepreneurs and Startups — Startups, Wanderlust & Life Hacking — Medium2015-02-18T19:32:46+00:00
https://medium.com/everything-about-startups-and-entrepreneurship/300-awesome-free-things-e07b3cd5fd5b
robertogrecoonlinetoolkit free resources tools via:clivethompson business marketing design code coding webdev writing learning education work productivity software web internet online logos fonts html5 css3 css html names naming hosting blogging imaging compression imageediting newsletters email socialmedia communitymanagement surveys color palettes stockphotography patterns typography icons symbols ui templates distraction collaboration alimese webdesignhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:b4a87318c998/Dan Grover | Chinese Mobile App UI Trends2014-12-10T10:30:45+00:00
http://dangrover.com/blog/2014/12/01/chinese-mobile-app-ui-trends.html
robertogrecomobile china ui interface chat design communication input notices notifications locationhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:10cf2fafb108/Calm Technology2014-11-06T21:47:20+00:00
http://calmtechnology.com/
robertogrecotechnology design ux ui teakettles calm calmtechnology via:alexismadrigal slow communication calmcommunication haptics ambientintimacy ambient roomba jawbone windows glanceable attention humanism periphery information chrisdancy ambercasehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:3faf9455a402/Mozilla Brick2014-09-30T07:47:21+00:00
http://brick.mozilla.io/
robertogrecowebdev mozilla brick mozillabrick ui webapps webcomponents html webdesignhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:e1d1451e7bbe/uilang2014-09-02T16:45:30+00:00
http://uilang.com/
robertogrecovia:tealtan css design javascript ui webdev webdesign html uilandhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:a0f68ca1db12/Adam Darowski | Blog | URL as UI2014-08-15T21:47:39+00:00
http://www.darowski.com/tracesofinspiration/2008/03/16/url-as-ui/
robertogrecourls 2008 design ui adamdarowski linkrot finability last.fm flickr readability via:mattthomas commandlinehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:6544d84060eb/Why Her Will Dominate UI Design Even More Than Minority Report | Wired Design | Wired.com2014-01-29T21:58:22+00:00
http://www.wired.com/design/2014/01/will-influential-ui-design-minority-report/
robertogrecoher spikejonze design ai film technology ui future minorityreport diller+scofidio elizabethdiller lizdiller dillerscofidio designfiction speculativedesign speculativefictionhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:e52ff4bd5f0f/The Future of UI and the Dream of the ‘90s — UX/UI human interfaces — Medium2014-01-20T01:32:42+00:00
https://medium.com/ux-ux-human-interfaces/a0b0cd7173c
robertogrecoux helentran ui interface 2014 design minorityreport animation emotions sound frankchimero journey clear duolingo vine tweetbot pixar maps mapping copy content writing gestureshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:7f2eaf164631/Bye Dopplr | Magical Nihilism2013-11-04T02:59:50+00:00
http://magicalnihilism.com/2013/11/04/bye-dopplr/
robertogrecomattjones dopplr design 2013 websites webdev networks howtobeintheworld ui content copy playfulness play pertinence dataportability portability data politeness connectivism webdesignhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:258be5622c72/Progressive Reduction — LayerVault Blog2013-08-02T03:59:23+00:00
http://layervault.tumblr.com/post/42361566927/progressive-reduction
robertogrecodesign minimalism ui ux 2013 reduction progressivereduction layervault interfacehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:4f0955c903b4/Dark Patterns - User Interfaces Designed to Trick People2013-07-19T03:42:17+00:00
http://darkpatterns.org/
robertogrecodarkpatterns patterns ui usability design ux via:caseygollan psychology manipulation tricks trickery illintent deceptionhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:ccb5bdd56688/Magic Ink: Information Software and the Graphical Interface2013-04-26T21:45:40+00:00
http://worrydream.com/MagicInk/
robertogrecodesign interface software ui usability ux interaction interactiondesign humans bretvictor via:johnpavlus information technology infromationsoftwarehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:035f4ae26ad5/Alan Kay on Learning - YouTube2013-03-26T20:30:07+00:00
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=50L44hEtVos
robertogrecoalankay learning concentration interface howwelearn unschooling deschooling education tennis body performance stateofmind thinking mind brain flow teaching attention focus ui bodieshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:2fd0521c30cd/Technologies for Aging Gracefully Lab | TAGlab2013-02-01T04:47:37+00:00
http://taglab.utoronto.ca/
robertogrecoaging behavior via:spencerbeacock utoronto interfacedesign psychology design ui compsci engineeringhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:31941aa21807/Connecting2012-12-17T01:25:39+00:00
http://connectingthefilm.com/
robertogrecocostumerexperience via:tealtan video massimobanzi blaiseagüerayarcas youngheejung helenwalters lizdanzico raphaelgrignani robertfabricant ericrodenbeck jonaslöwgren robertmurdock andreiherasimchuk jenniferbove interactiondesign design microsoft interaction ui uxhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:d75871872df8/mattkersley/Responsive-Design-Testing2012-11-16T03:47:59+00:00
https://github.com/mattkersley/Responsive-Design-Testing
robertogrecowebdev responsivewebdesign ui mobile webdesign css testing design responsive responsivedesignhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:f99bab221cb3/The Cooper Journal: The best interface is no interface2012-08-30T03:48:45+00:00
http://www.cooper.com/journal/2012/08/the-best-interface-is-no-interface.html/
robertogrecoglowingrectangles via:maxfenton screens square paymentsystems nfc everyware ubicomp calmtechnology markweiser ambercase kevinashton adamgreenfield donaldnorman goldenkrishna computing nest ui cars interfaces interactiondesignhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:741625ca7ba6/132-page document shows full extent of iPhone's influence on Samsung interface design | The Verge2012-08-09T03:39:44+00:00
http://www.theverge.com/2012/8/8/3227289/samsung-apple-ux-ui-interface-improvement
robertogrecosamsung apple ui interactiondesign legal via:mayonissenhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:80388bca0e79/7 myths about paper prototyping2012-07-19T01:52:29+00:00
http://www.userfocus.co.uk/articles/paperprototyping.html
robertogrecopaper paperprototyping ui wireframes design webdesign ux usability prototyping webdevhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:0b7c8ede4226/Augmented Paper - Matt Gemmell2012-04-13T19:03:29+00:00
http://mattgemmell.com/2012/04/13/augmented-paper/
robertogrecoinstapaper aesthetics tactile clear invisibleinterfaces instinctivecode digital minimalism tablets augmentation mobile ipad iphone applications augmentedpaper mattgemmell 2012 via:preoccupations designasexperience ui ux windowsphonemetro windowsphone7 metro windows design ios apple android wp7 skeuomorph windowsphonehttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:102d07cc36f3/