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May 2006 Communicating Complex Ideas"The most successful sites are those that understand the experience range of their users. Some are veteran traders who know what to do, while others can’t tell a bid from an ask price. Accommodating the novice traders is crucial to the success of these markets, as well as moving them along as they gain experience." (Alex Kirtland - Boxes and Arrows) Posted by PJB on May 31, 2006 | Classification: UCD | Permalink Dogmas Are Meant to be Broken: An Interview with Eric Reiss"And standards are just standards, and they can change as technology changes. Best practices are guidelines; they're not rules. It’s best to keep two seconds worth of stopping distance between you and the car in front of you, for example. That’s just good common sense. As cars get faster, these distances change, and the best practices change. But they remain only guidelines." (Liz Danzico - Boxes and Arrows) Posted by PJB on May 31, 2006 | Classification: Interviews | Permalink Digital Maoism: The Hazards of the New Online Collectivism"The hive mind is for the most part stupid and boring. Why pay attention to it? The problem is in the way the Wikipedia has come to be regarded and used; how it's been elevated to such importance so quickly. And that is part of the larger pattern of the appeal of a new online collectivism that is nothing less than a resurgence of the idea that the collective is all-wise, that it is desirable to have influence concentrated in a bottleneck that can channel the collective with the most verity and force. This is different from representative democracy, or meritocracy. This idea has had dreadful consequences when thrust upon us from the extreme Right or the extreme Left in various historical periods. The fact that it's now being re-introduced today by prominent technologists and futurists, people who in many cases I know and like, doesn't make it any less dangerous." (Jaron Lanier - Edge) Posted by PJB on May 30, 2006 | Classification: Information design | Permalink The Overlap Blog"Overlap is an un-conference for anyone who wants to learn more about merging business practices with design-centric problem solving and customer understanding. (...) Overlap aims for an experience that is multidisciplinary, collaborative, pragmatic and ultimately human." (overlap.org) Posted by PJB on May 30, 2006 | Classification: Information design | Permalink B2B Usability"User testing shows that business-to-business websites have substantially lower usability than mainstream consumer sites. If they want to convert more prospects into leads, B2B sites should follow more guidelines and make it easier for prospects to research their offerings." (Jakob Nielsen - Alertbox) Posted by PJB on May 30, 2006 | Classification: Usability | Permalink Where should 'User Experience' be positioned in your company?"Should User Experience stand alone? If standing alone, User Experience can still risk being treated as a resource. But, the above-referenced VP of Customer Experience Research & Design thinks his group should stand alone. And in some companies, it does stand alone." (Richard Anderson - riander) Posted by PJB on May 28, 2006 | Classification: User experience | Permalink Exposing the Local InfoCloud"The Local InfoCloud started as an idea of information that was physically close. What is stored or accessed by physical location (information that is physically close) as in an Intranet or location-based information accessed on your mobile device. The more I thought about it and chatted with others it became clear it was more than physical location, it is information resources that are familiar and easier to access than the whole of the web (Global InfoCloud) as a framing concept." (Thomas Vander Wall - Personal InfoCloud) Posted by PJB on May 28, 2006 | Classification: Information design | Permalink The Web is still a thrilling place"When you get frustrated by the pressures of managing a website, look back five years. You've achieved a lot." (Gerry McGovern) Posted by PJB on May 28, 2006 | Classification: Information design | Permalink Websites as Graphs"Everyday, we look at dozens of websites. The structure of these websites is defined in HTML, the lingua franca for publishing information on the web. Your browser's job is to render the HTML according to the specs (most of the time, at least). You can look at the code behind any website by selecting the 'View source' tab somewhere in your browser's menu. (...) I've written a little app that visualizes such a graph, and here are some screenshots of websites that I often look at." (WebasGraph app by Aharef) - courtesy of edwardtufte Posted by PJB on May 27, 2006 | Classification: InfoViz | Permalink Chinese Banks Homepage Usability"This study assesses the usability of homepages of three leading Chinese retail banks from a user’s perspective. For comparison, three western banks are selected, one each a leading retail bank from Australia, the UK, and the USA." (Ming Zhao - Apogee) - courtesy of danielszuc Posted by PJB on May 27, 2006 | Classification: Usability | Permalink IA Summit 2006 Recordings"After much procrastination, here are all my recordings from this year's Information Architecture Summit sessions. (...) I was sad to have to trash some of the recordings, but this year I sat with the trouble-making kids in the back, so the audio quality was not the best in many sessions." (Livia Labate) - Much appreciated. Posted by PJB on May 26, 2006 | Classification: Information architecture | Permalink Collaborative Tagging Workshop @W3'06 Papers"Collaborative tagging seems to address a real need on the Web as demonstrated by the growing popularity of tagging and annotation sites (see del.icio.us, flickr, technorati, RawSugar, Shadows, etc.). The most popular sites already have a combined user base of several millions. The philosophy of what is called Web 2.0, the social Web or also the two-way Web is that users can and should be content creators as well as consumers and it suggests that there is a great deal of untapped potential for tagging to improve how web content is organized, navigated and experienced. Yet it is not yet clear how it will evolve and how it will scale, when, if at all, its usage base will go beyond early adopters. The goal of this workshop is to bring researchers and practitioners together in order to explore both the social and technical issues and challenges involved in Web tagging. We plan to address not only the current state of collaborative tagging, and understand its attractiveness to early adopters but also discuss its future." (W3 Tagging Workshop) Posted by PJB on May 25, 2006 | Classification: Metadata | Permalink Expert Voices: Peter Morville on Why Information Architecture Matters"So it's very difficult to isolate the information architecture from the other elements of the user experience. You could certainly do that in a research lab, but in the real world all of these factors work together. It's quite possible to do a beautiful information architecture redesign but completely destroy the experience by messing up the graphic side of things." (CIO Insight) Posted by PJB on May 25, 2006 | Classification: Interviews | Permalink 3rd International Workshop on the Weblogging Ecosystem Papers"The weblogging community continues to evolve: weblogs are gaining more and more exposure, the number of bloggers continues to grow and the contribution of individual bloggers is becoming significant and compelling. The dynamics of the blogosphere, found in trackbacks, citation links, blog-rolls, comments, tags, shared topics and interests provides a facinating domain of study for researchers from all academic and commercial fields including text mining, social network analysis, computational linguistics, business and marketing intelligence, libarary sciences, taxonometrics, graph theory and data visualization." (WWE 2006 Blog) Posted by PJB on May 25, 2006 | Classification: Weblogs | Permalink Architecture and interaction design, via adaptation and hackability"(...) drawing selectively from the riches of thousands of years of architectural development, both professional and vernacular, can only be a good thing in such a nascent field as interaction design." (Dan Hill - cityofsound) Posted by PJB on May 25, 2006 | Classification: Interaction design | Permalink WebPatterns and WebSemantics"Can web design and development today rightly be called a discipline? Or is it, as I suspect, a practice in the process of becoming a discipline." (WebPatterns.org) Posted by PJB on May 25, 2006 | Classification: Patterns | Permalink Design Patterns: A Conversation"(...) a conversation about defining and sharing user interface design languages." (LukeW - Functioning Form) Posted by PJB on May 23, 2006 | Classification: Patterns | Permalink Peter Merholz' IA Summit 2006 Closing Plenary"Thanks to Livia Labate, you can listen to my closing plenary at the 2006 IA Summit. It will help you if you follow along with the PDF of my slides. I'm definitely proud of this talk, though I hate hearing all my uh's and 'um's. Definitely something to work on. If you want to avoid the aspects of IA history that I dwell on and hop to the thesis, start around the 12:00 mark." (peterme) - great talk peter! Posted by PJB on May 22, 2006 | Classification: Information architecture | Permalink DC IA Summit Redux 2006"I had a great time hanging out with the DC-IA crowd this weekend talking about the sessions and experience of going to the IA Summit in Vancouver back in March. We unfortunately ran out of time and didn’t get to talk about all the topics we wanted to address, but there were very interesting and livelly conversations nonetheless. Here are a few recordings with our discussions; feel free to download and catch up." (Livia Labate) Posted by PJB on May 22, 2006 | Classification: Information architecture | Permalink The Web Standards Project: Education Task Force"The WaSP Education Task Force was created in 2005 to work directly with institutions of higher education to help raise awareness of Web standards and accessibility among instructors, administrators, and Web development teams." (WaSP) - courtesy of 456breastreet Posted by PJB on May 22, 2006 | Classification: Accessibility | Permalink PERMID 2006: Papers and Slides"Mobile devices have become a pervasive part of our everyday lives. People have mobile phones, smartphones and PDAs which they take with them almost everywhere. So far these mobile devices have been mostly used for phone calls, writing short messages and organizer functionalities. Today we see that the development of context-aware services for mobile phones which often take the user, her situation and location into account." (Enrico Rukzio et al.) Posted by PJB on May 21, 2006 | Classification: Mobile design | Permalink Usability Body of Knowledge"The Usability Body of Knowledge (BoK) project is dedicated to creating a living reference that represents the collective knowledge of the usability profession. Preliminary work has started, but there is more to do. This website introduces the subject areas that will eventually be included in the Usability Body of Knowledge and a preview of what to come." (About Usability BoK) Posted by PJB on May 19, 2006 | Classification: Usability | Permalink What's Up With Knowledge?"David Weinberger, Berkman fellow, author, and blogger, talks about some of the ideas he's exploring in a new book he's writing on knowledge." (AudioBerkman) Posted by PJB on May 18, 2006 | Classification: Podcasts | Permalink Adaptive Path Weblog"It's taken a little over five years, but today we officially launched the Adaptive Path weblog. Enjoy!" (Adaptive Path) - congrats! Posted by PJB on May 16, 2006 | Classification: Weblogs | Permalink Communicating design concepts without getting skewered"Communicating design does take time, no doubt about it. But it will save a lot more time by reducing the thrash that occurs when developers don't have a clear understanding about what it is they are supposed to build." (Steve Calde - Cooper Newsletter3.2) Posted by PJB on May 15, 2006 | Classification: UCD | Permalink Information Experience Labs"It is an interesting mix of 'information' (information architecture, information science, ...) and ' experience' (user experience, experience design, ...). A few years ago I proposed the term as a way to describe an industry, but the idea did not stick." (Keith Instone) Posted by PJB on May 14, 2006 | Classification: User experience | Permalink Convivio Network"(...) the European Thematic Network for the human-centered design of interactive technologies. Convivio supports and promotes the development of 'convivial technologies', ICT products, systems and services that enhance the quality of everyday life and human interaction." (About Convivio) - congrats fabio! Posted by PJB on May 12, 2006 | Classification: UCD | Permalink Making User Representations More Usable
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