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Why Persuasive Design Should Be Your Next Skill Set | UX Magazine
http://uxmag.com/design/why-persuasive-design-should-be-your-next-skill-setThe UX discipline has been busy. In the last two decades, it has formalized the practices of information architecture, experience design, content strategy, and interaction design. Thanks to the insatiable drive of UX practitioners to improve and define the field, it will continue to grow, and persuasive design is the next practice it will supercharge and embrace, folding its techniques into interaction design.
Tags: design, ux, persuasion, webdesign, toread, ui, interactiondesign, usability, persuasivedesign, psychology Saved by: admin
UX Magazine - The User Experience Magazine
http://www.uxmag.com
Tags: ux_magazines, magazines Saved by: admin
http://www.uxmag.com
Tags: ux_magazines, magazines Saved by: admin
UX Magazine - Don’t let branding kill your brand
“That’s not one of our corporate colors.” The words hit you like a whiff of smelly cheese. You try to explain that, yes, the corporate colors are baby blue and yellow, but that combination isn’t optimal for building the main menu of a website.
http://www.uxmag.com/design/303/dont-let-branding-kill-your-brand
Tags: marketing, experience, colour, branding, brand Saved by: admin
“That’s not one of our corporate colors.” The words hit you like a whiff of smelly cheese. You try to explain that, yes, the corporate colors are baby blue and yellow, but that combination isn’t optimal for building the main menu of a website.
http://www.uxmag.com/design/303/dont-let-branding-kill-your-brand
Tags: marketing, experience, colour, branding, brand Saved by: admin
Rich Internet Application Screen Design | UX Magazine
Structuring the application properly will ensure a solid base for the rest of the design process. There are three types of application structure:
http://uxmag.com/design/rich-internet-application-screen-design
Tags: ria, ux, design, ui, interface, interaction, ia, patterns, usability, screen Saved by: admin
Structuring the application properly will ensure a solid base for the rest of the design process. There are three types of application structure:
http://uxmag.com/design/rich-internet-application-screen-design
Tags: ria, ux, design, ui, interface, interaction, ia, patterns, usability, screen Saved by: admin
Eye Candy vs. Bare-Bones in UI Design | UX Magazine
good article about the compromise between designing "pretty" things and "usable" or functional things. In a nutshell: people have to want to & enjoy using an interface or it becomes less "usable" regardless of how functional it is.
http://uxmag.com/design/eye-candy-vs-bare-bones-in-ui-design
Tags: design, ui, ux, usability, webdesign, interface, usabilidade, via:packrati.us, gui, article Saved by: admin
good article about the compromise between designing "pretty" things and "usable" or functional things. In a nutshell: people have to want to & enjoy using an interface or it becomes less "usable" regardless of how functional it is.
http://uxmag.com/design/eye-candy-vs-bare-bones-in-ui-design
Tags: design, ui, ux, usability, webdesign, interface, usabilidade, via:packrati.us, gui, article Saved by: admin
The Psychologist’s View of UX Design | UX Magazine
The story of the elephant reminds me of the different view of design that people of different backgrounds, education, and experience have. A visual designer approaches UX design from one point of view, the interaction designer from another, and the programmer from yet another. It can be helpful to understand and even experience the part of the elephant that others are experiencing. I'm a psychologist by training and education. So the part of the elephant I experience applies what we know about people and how we apply that to UX design. I take research and knowledge about the brain, the visual system, memory, and motivation and extrapolate UX design principles from that. This article is a snapshot of the psychologist's view of the elephant.
http://uxmag.com/design/the-psychologists-view-of-ux-design
Tags: ux, psychology, usability, design, webdesign, ui, userexperience, research, interface, article Saved by: admin
The story of the elephant reminds me of the different view of design that people of different backgrounds, education, and experience have. A visual designer approaches UX design from one point of view, the interaction designer from another, and the programmer from yet another. It can be helpful to understand and even experience the part of the elephant that others are experiencing. I'm a psychologist by training and education. So the part of the elephant I experience applies what we know about people and how we apply that to UX design. I take research and knowledge about the brain, the visual system, memory, and motivation and extrapolate UX design principles from that. This article is a snapshot of the psychologist's view of the elephant.
http://uxmag.com/design/the-psychologists-view-of-ux-design
Tags: ux, psychology, usability, design, webdesign, ui, userexperience, research, interface, article Saved by: admin