Beautiful UX deliverables, persuasive design, copying Snapchat, and more UX this weekDesign links to start your week inspired.
Beautifully crafted UX deliverables for your inspiration →When people think of UX Design documentation, — wireframes, flows, personas — the first image that comes to mind is dense, long, and heavily annotated documents, full of boxes and arrows that indicate how a system is going to function and behave. But it doesn't have to be like that. Here are a few examples of UX deliverables that are well polished, legible and simple to understand. Sketching interfaces, by Airbnb →Using AI to identify modules and components in hand sketches and generate final code in a matter of minutes. By Benjamin Wilkins. The pitfalls of persuasive design →The technologies we use have turned into compulsions. What can we do about it? By Maya Frai. The endless battle, by Alan Cooper →User-centered versus designer-centered, and how the prototyping-and-testing process can hurt the quality of your work. By Alan Cooper. The journey from engineer to UX designer →The journey of an engineer to becoming a UX design, and lessons learned along the way. By Florian Lissot. Designing for large touch screens →Designing a 22-inch touchscreen for a vending machine, and what that means for the design process. By Yubing Zhang. What UX designers really want from user research →Why we must go beyond the surface meaning of analytics data to understand the whys of users' needs and behaviors. UX, growth, and kids these days →Why the TBH app makes me squirm but still got 5m users and was acquired by Facebook in 2 months. By Craig Phillips. Stop designing for only 85% of users: nailing accessibility in design →We have reached a point where users expect products to be optimized for a broad range of needs. Broader than you think. What Facebook's shameless copying of Snapchat means for product strategy →How the company is prepared to do whatever it takes in order to fend off any competitors that get serious traction. By Hiten Shah. News & Ideas
Tools & Resources
A year ago…Stop the spammy notifications →On a typical day, I get about 30 notifications on my phone. 30 times a day, my phone buzzes or beeps at me, begging for attention. It buzzes when I'm cooking breakfast. It buzzes when I'm running to a meeting. It even buzzes when I'm giving my toddler a bath… (by John Saito) Brought to you by your friends Fabricio Teixeira and Caio Braga. Like the links? Forward the ♥ |
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Sunday, 29 October 2017
Beautiful UX deliverables, persuasive design, copying Snapchat, and more UX this week
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