Dear #OpenSource folks, I'd like to offer #UX help to your teams. I've tried "making a small PR" on projects and it turns out that's TERRIBLE advice for a UX designer. The PR is usually misunderstood or ignored. I don't fault the teams for this! It's just the wrong tool for the job. So I'm trying something different. I'm offering free consulting time to any project that wants it. Sign up here:
I'm working with Mastodon on building out their UX design team. I'm so excited they are growing like this. I'll be supporting this person in their role
With Android releasing one of my haptics designs recently, I can finally talk more about how powerful "responsive haptics" can be as a #UX design material. I've written up how it works on my blog:
Book Lovers! I just joined BookWyrm and am looking forward to learning how to use it. But I have a rather obvious getting started question: How do I manage having two "fediverse addresses"? (the one you're reading and my new Bookwyrm one) If I post reviews using my BookWyrm account, I'm assuming no one will see my reviews as, not surprisingly, no one is following that account. Am I missing something obvious? For example, if I wanted to share a book review in BookWyrm, do I just share the link?
#Cloud #hosting recommendation? The world of cloud hosting is changing so rapidly. What I'd like is a provider where I could "one-click-install" a range of packages. For example, I'd like to try NextCloud or my own instance of PenPot. I realize not all services will provide a 1-click for EVERYTHING but I'd like one that has a robust set that would allow me to play. This does NOT need to be high performance, this is for personal exploration.
One of my earliest UX wins was for Mac System 7. The Finder team wanted to truncate files names with '…' if it wouldn’t fit. I argued that too much critical info would be lost and suggested it be in the middle instead. The Finder team loved it and implemented it later that day. They were so easy to work with. I'd totally forgotten about it until I overheard someone commenting it was an example of Apple's attention to detail. I'd didn't say anything at the time but yeah, that was me ;-) image
For years now, I've offered free consulting to any hardware company that has a product with buttons. Why? Because most companies don't have a UX department, and bad UX hurts their bottom line. Tiny and inexpensive changes, like a better label or a simple software tweak, could make a substantial difference. I've written about it here: This isn't a gimmick. I'm lucky to be retired and don't want their money. This is just me throwing my hat out there one more time...
Rivian’s chief software officer says in-car buttons are ‘an anomaly’. His basic point is that voice is far better. <sigh> We go through these every few years, you'd think we'd have learned by now: 1. Voice isn't enough Voice is great, and it does have value but it's best when you're alone. There are lots of situations where voice just doesn't work. It's an ADDITIONAL modality, not a REPLACEMENT. #UX #Voice image
Elevators are the #UX gift that keeps giving. I just discovered this beauty. On top of that, the door closing times are very slow so it's very helpful to push a close button. I just stood and stared... image
I'm going door to door in Lacrosse Wisconsin, helping to answer any questions they might have to make sure they can vote. It's uplifting work, only talking to registered democrats, who are mostly happy to chat, and are totally supportive. It's a win/win. The tech is impressive too. There's a app that tells us which house to knock on, who is there, even if they've already voted so we can skip them. (although it SHOULD be a web page... ;-)