A door with 6 different pieces of paper up telling people to push to lock and not to turn
Who needs UX, just add a label so users will know what to do
A door with 6 different pieces of paper up telling people to push to lock and not to turn
Who needs UX, just add a label so users will know what to do
The image shows a part of the poem The Lucky One by Diane Seuss: The first was my father. They carted him away in his blue suit, speckled with rhinestones of dew. I was feather-young, just seven. Too young to believe in heaven, or to know how to cry when something dies: Then came my romantic era. I was sassafras-leaf-green. Barely thirteen. Foreseeable.
After a busy week, on the last day of the Eras Tour, Iβm finally getting to read βInvisible Strings: 113 poets respond to the songs of Taylor Swiftβ, edited by Kristie Frederick Daugherty. What an amazing selection of poets! It has been a delightful experience so far
Looks really interesting! π§
Yes π
Here is the basis of my current project and why I avoid the term "UX design" if you are having a really boring Friday night.
There's a video or you can read. It's multimodal!
www.muledesign.com/blog/triple-...
Pretty cool thread !
βThe core user experience isnβt about features or aesthetic minimalism. Itβs about solving real user problems in the most effective way possible. β
Great article and gorgeous font!
ooooh really tempted to buy it too
βFor everything else, the user experience is enhanced by interfaces that are intuitively located, immediately available and delightfully responsive.β
βThis is where distributed interfaces shine. They donβt do away with screens. They reserve them for situations where the visual presentation of information is the dominant need.β
The UX of LEGO Interface Panels interactionmagic.com/UX-LEGO-Inte...
Currently working on digital products in the insurance industry! How about you?
Let's encourage HCI/design students to pursue opportunities and experiment with new technology (like AI) without making harmful claims about their career trajectory if they don't.
AI is one of many technologies we may have to design for. Not the "only" one we should learn, teach or prioritize.
UX designer here π
Design takes far more than Figma expertise. The best designers I know are amazing collaborators, they know how to work in imperfect environments, know what it takes to make things happen, to work with executives, and ship meaningful changes with engineers. They know when to push and when to pull.
Another busy day ahead
Understandable! I have way too many projects lined up π
I haven't tried it yet π«€ Too swamped right now, but I wanna try it during the holidays
Thatβs great! Thereβs a good article on a @figma.com + @rive.app workflow uxdesign.cc/how-i-create...
Fellow designers, what design tools or tools in general do you want to try in 2025? For me, itβs Protopie and @rive.app
I wrote a post about dyscalculia and how you can design to help people like me who struggle with numbers: www.gerireid.com/dyscalculia.... #accessibility #a11y
Hi π UX design here
Must-read blog post for UXers by @duncanstephen.net
βSyncing your design and code libraries is [β¦] about creating a shared language and understanding between designers and developers. If the purpose, features, schema, and style of components arenβt aligned, youβll end up with miscommunication, frustration, and a lot of wasted time.β
Sim Daltonism is also a good free colour blindness simulator michelf.ca/projects/mac...
I think that another thing to add to all that would be working as much as possible on multidisciplinary real-life projects across all of these classes. IMHO we have too much of a βdribbble-izationβ in design curricula. We end up learning to βdesignβ pretty products to solve fake problems
A short article to help everyone write better alt-texts: sc.edu/about/office...
Can you add me? UX designer based in Canada here π
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