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Mobile design

Bruce Sterling preaching in the Red Hat

"In this nearly 27 minute video Bruce Sterling, a leading futurist, speaker, columnist and science fiction writer, shares his vision on where mobile is heading. Preaching his story from a somewhat unconventional place, the pulpit instead of the stage, he managed to silence the audience. Check the video to see what he had to say to the Mobile sinners." (Mobile Monday Amsterdam)

Posted on November 10, 2008 | Permalink

Keynote at MobileHCI2008: BJ Fogg - Mobile Miracle

"At the center of the talk was that prediction that mobile devices will be within 15 years the main technology for persuasion. He argued that mobile phones are the greatest invention of human kind – more important than the writing and transportation systems (e.g. planes, cars). He explained why mobile phones are so interesting based on three metaphors: heart, wrist watch, magic wand." (Albert Schmidt - User Interface Engineering)

Posted on September 04, 2008 | Permalink

MobileHCI 2008 Tutorial

"The conference on mobile human computer interaction (MobileHCI 2008) started today in Amsterdam with the tutorial and workshop day. (...) Have a look at the slides." (Albert Schmidt - User Interface Engineering)

Posted on September 04, 2008 | Permalink

The Mobile Internet and Mix Tapes

"The blue print of the Internet we experience today has been created and shaped strongly by the discipline of information architecture." (Rachel Hinman - Adaptive Path)

Posted on June 06, 2008 | Permalink

MoMoment MoMo#5 - Dan Armstrong

"Dan Armstrong, CTO of Rabo Mobiel, was the keynote speaker for Mobile Monday #5. During the keynote (duration 35.30) Dan tells more about what Rabo Mobiel is doing at this moment, looks forward to the projects planned for this year, and challenges the public with some of his ideas on what the environment looks like in 2012." (Mobile Monday Amsterdam)

Posted on April 09, 2008 | Permalink

Free iPhone usability report

"The results? The iPhone has introduced a new interaction paradigm to the world, in an uncompromising way that proves that 'less is more' when it comes to true user experience." (inUseFul.se)

Posted on February 28, 2008 | Permalink

Interface Design and the iPhone

"The iPhone platform elegantly solves the design problem of small screens by greatly intensifying the information resolution of each displayed page. Small screens, as on traditional cell phones, show very little information per screen, which in turn leads to deep hierarchies of stacked-up thin information--too often leaving users with 'Where am I?' puzzles. Better to have users looking over material adjacent in space rather than stacked in time." (Edward Tufte)

Posted on January 24, 2008 | Permalink

The 2008 Mobile User Experience Manifesto

"MEX is the two day strategy forum for the leading minds in mobile telecoms. The next event will be held in London on 27th - 28th May 2008. Join us at the conference to debate the Manifesto and set the customer experience agenda. - 1. Content itself will be the interface of the future (...)" (The PMN Mobile UX conference)

Posted on January 10, 2008 | Permalink

Workshop on Mobile Internet User Experience

Presentation slides on the workshop held September 9th, 2007 at the Singapore Polytechnic. (Nokia Research Center wiki)

Posted on November 01, 2007 | Permalink

iPhone Human Interface Guidelines

"Apple's iPhone presents a revolutionary user interface and interaction model. Users can view webpages, use web applications, and use built-in iPhone features, such as the email application, the iPod, and the digital camera, wherever they go. Safari on iPhone, a unique implementation of Safari, is the application users use to browse the web on both iPhone and iPod touch." (Apple Developer Connection) - courtesy of daringfireball

Posted on October 01, 2007 | Permalink

Mobile Social Play

"So I've been busy uploading stuff. The slides to my Reboot 9.0 talk are up at SlideShare. I uploaded a video recorded by Iskander with his N70 to Vimeo. Finally, since SlideShare still doesn’t import the notes that go with the slides in PowerPoint, I’ve also put up a big PDF (almost 50 MB)." (Kars Alfrink - Leapfrog)

Posted on June 07, 2007 | Permalink

Methods of Understanding and Designing For Mobile Communities

"Society is increasingly on the move, mobile devices are commonly being used to coordinate group actions, and group communication features are rapidly being added to existing technologies. Despite this, little is known about how mobile groups act, or how communications technologies should be designed to augment existing behaviour. This is partially due to minimal research being done on the topic, but also to the lack of research methods available to study the topic with. Mobile groups are challenging to study because of frequent and long-duration movement, frequent distribution, and the rapidly changing environments they operate within. To address these issues, this research focuses on methodological issues surrounding the development of mobile devices for mobile groups and communities. More specifically it addresses backpackers, who are a relevant example of this type of community. The research primarily explores the convergence of computer supported cooperative work (CSCW) and the field of mobile device development. This enables the combination of emphasis on designing technologies for groups, social implications, mobile device design, and mobile settings." (Jeff Axup - Mobile Community Design)

Posted on April 26, 2007 | Permalink

Designing the Mobile User Experience

"One of our biggest challenges in designing mobile services has been our inability to connect with our customers. We're making the same mistakes we've made when designing for other media, but the constraints inherent in mobile devices exacerbate those mistakes. We can overcome this challenge by following the user-centered design process we've been advocating and using all along. We should do the user research that's necessary to understand what users need and deliver meaningful, valuable products and services that integrate well with and enhance our customers' lifestyles. Put simply, the opportunity for the mobile Web is huge, and UX professionals are the right people to help companies realize this opportunity. It's yours, take it." (Richard F. Cecil - UXmatters)

Posted on October 11, 2006 | 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 on May 21, 2006 | Permalink

Deconstructing the Mobile Web

"The mobile user experience does not fit into the browser-like box within which people are conceiving its potential capabilities today. The sooner we conceive of mobile-computing paradigms along their own continuum—detached from the original evolution of the World Wide Web—the sooner we will enjoy the potential of a mobile-computing world." (Dirk Knemeyer - UXmatters)

Posted on May 09, 2006 | Permalink

Towards a Sociological Theory of the Mobile Phone

"(...) history shows that communication technologies are typically highly polyvalent tools that can change their major functions completely during time." (Hans Geser - Sociology of the Mobile Phone)

Posted on May 08, 2006 | Permalink

OzCHI Publication on Backpackers

"(...) a workshop paper and a short paper on backpackers and research methods for mobile groups." (Jeff Axup - Mobile Community Design)

Posted on November 29, 2005 | Permalink

Mobile Web Design: Tips & Techniques

"This article attempts to present technical advice on a superficial level. Some tips may surprise the reader; others may disappoint. But let's be clear about one thing: We're not aiming to publish a replete guide to advanced mobile development, but rather a starting point for mobile development - both practical and ambitious. Hence, a superficial treatment of the topic." (Cameron Moll - Authentic Boredom)

Posted on October 27, 2005 | Permalink

A Sense of Place: The Global and Local in Mobile Communication

"Issues of placelessness, the spatial and social relations created by television's emergence as a dominant medium, have been around since the mid-1980s. With the triumphant march of mobile telephony these issues today appear to gain new significance and are seen in a new light. Social science focussing on mobile communication increasingly recgnizes that the mobile telephone is not only a revolutionary instrument that connects people globally, it is also a powerful tool for connections on a more local scale: an organizer of life in small spaces and communities." (Kristóf Nyiri)

Posted on October 20, 2005 | Permalink

Usability-driven open platform for mobile government

"The main goal of USE-ME.GOV is to contribute to a Next-Generation Open Service Platform for mobile users that can be shared by networked authorities and institutions (e.g. on a regional scale) in terms of technical infrastructure, information (content) as well as a framework for commercial exploitation." (Contact use-me.gov) - courtesy of usabilitynews

Posted on October 12, 2005 | Permalink

Mixed Reality Check: Mobile User Experience in the age of Ubiconn PDF Logo

"Today efficiency and effectiveness end up informing most design decisions (...) and in many cases rightly so (...) but leaving people missing a 'sense of delight' from their constant interactions with mobile connected devices." (Fabio Sergio - freegorifero)

Posted on September 08, 2005 | Permalink

Blogging over Las Vegas: Seven Challenges to our Shared Mobile Future

"How will we explain to our children that before, when you wanted to call someone, you needed to stand against a wall? Mobile phones today have become ubiquitous, embedded into the fabric of everyday life. They have become a mobile essential. If someone owns a mobile phone today it is likely to be one of the three things that she always carries with her, the other two being keys and some form of payment." (Marko Ahtisaari) - courtesy of purselipsquarejaw

Posted on September 06, 2005 | Permalink

Methods to the Madness

This is the second article in the four-part series. - “Neither praying nor cursing is likely to do a mobile site any good, especially if done in tandem." (Authentic Boredom) - courtesy of nickfinck

Posted on August 14, 2005 | Permalink

State of the Mobile Web

This is the first article in the four-part series on Mobile Web Design. - "(...) if we learned only one thing from the 'desktop web' standards movement in recent years, it's that even the most behemoth organizations listen if the wheel squeaks loudly enough. And where listening ears are found, there lies also the potential for change." (Authentic Boredom)

Posted on August 06, 2005 | Permalink

Towards a Sociology of the Mobile Phone

"Use of the mobile phone is an immensely significant social and cultural phenomenon. However, market hype and utopian dreams greatly exaggerate its importance. The fundamental issue for sociology is the process of change. Bound up with contemporary issues of change, the mobile phone is a prime object for sociological attention both at the macro and micro levels of analysis. This article considers the strengths and weaknesses of four methods for studying the sociality of the mobile phone (social demography; political economy; conversation, discourse and text analysis; and ethnography), the different kinds of knowledge they produce, and the interests they represent." (Jim McGuigan - Human Technology) - courtesy of annegalloway

Posted on June 21, 2005 | Permalink

The Culture of Mobility

"(...) a place where everyone can come to share their thoughts and make some sense of an increasingly mobile society. It aims to address the notion of mobility in the context of everyday life, calling on the experience of pioneers in various industries, and evaluating the past, present and future of connectivity." (nokia.com)

Posted on May 19, 2005 | Permalink

Designs on less complex mobiles

"What the industry should be coming up with are more innovative ways to get at these functions (...) in ways that understand the kinds of experiences people want. It is about simplicity through design." (BBC News Technology) - courtesy of lawrencelee

Posted on May 17, 2005 | Permalink

Mobile Web Initiative

Making Web access from a mobile device as simple, easy and convenient as Web access from a desktop device - "World Wide Web technologies have become the key enablers for access to the Internet through desktop and notebook computing platforms. Web technologies have the potential to play the same role for Internet access from mobile devices. However, today, mobile Web access suffers from interoperability and usability problems that make the Web difficult to use for most mobile phone subscribers. W3C's 'Mobile Web Initiative' (W3C MWI) proposes to address these issues through a concerted effort of key players in the mobile production chain, including authoring tool vendors, content providers, handset manufacturers, browser vendors and mobile operators." (W3C)

Posted on May 11, 2005 | Permalink

The Annoyance, Irritation, and Frustration of The Mobile Phone: A Design Challenge

"We are in real danger of a consumer backlash against annoying technologies. We already have seen the growth of mobile-phone free zones, of prohibition against phone use, camera use, camera phones, in all sort of public and private places. The mobile phone has been shown to be a dangerous distraction to the driver of an automobile, whether hands-free or not. If we do nothing to overcome these problems, then the benefits these technologies bring may very well be denied us because the social costs are simply too great. There are many sources of frustration or potential liability." (Donald A. Norman) - courtesy of usabilityviews

Posted on April 10, 2005 | Permalink

Mobile and Open: A Manifesto

"Only a cockeyed optimist would forecast an open, user-driven, entrepreneurial future for the mobile Internet. This should not prevent us from trying, however. Sometimes, envisioning the way things ought to be can inspire people to work at making it that way. That's what manifestos are for." (Howard Rheingold - TheFeature)

Posted on April 07, 2005 | Permalink

Advanced Handsets Need Advanced UIs

"As mobile phones become more capable, people are using them to store an increasingly wider variety and greater quantity of data. This raises a new problem for designers of handset user interfaces: how do you let owners find what they're looking for in a coherent and friendly manner?" (Tom Hume - TheFeature) - courtesy of lucdesk

Posted on April 07, 2005 | Permalink