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6 result(s) displayed (11 - 16 of 16):

Startup Priorities: Is Design More Important Than Engineering?

By Chris Cameron / February 8, 2010 05:10 AM / Comments

We are all told to never judge a book by its cover, but let's face it, when we find ourselves at an ugly website, we automatically make assumptions about the quality of the services that site provides. A topic we have begun to cover more often, and one that we strongly believe in, is the importance of design for startups. In the last several weeks we've provided tips and best practices for sign-up buttons and registration processes, as well as an inside look into at Boxee's user experience overhaul.

An Inside Look Into Boxee's Systematic UX Overhaul Process

By Chris Cameron / January 28, 2010 08:00 AM / Comments

Anyone who has been using Facebook for a few years knows that even minor changes to an interface design can cause a wide variety of reactions from a loyal user base. When the popular social network has made design tweaks in the past, there is always some portion of their users that are upset, if not enraged, by the changes made. A couple of weeks ago, we told you how your registration process could be driving potential users away, and a large part of that has to do with the design.

Is Your Registration Process Scaring Away Users?

By Dana Oshiro / January 15, 2010 08:30 AM / Comments

When you run a community site, your registration and minimum profile requirements are like the front porch to your home. As technology bloggers we trick-or-treat to at least a dozen sites per day and when you make your porch scary, we'd just as soon skip your house. If I make it past 10 minutes of forms and service terms only to find you've got toothbrushes and raisins for me, I'm going to be pissed off. If you're looking at redesigning your site, below are 6 points to consider.

Photos From Facebook HQ: Free Love, Free Jerky & Freedom for User Data

By Marshall Kirkpatrick / February 11, 2009 05:43 AM / Comments

After a period of dramatic tension, social networking giant Facebook has joined forces with the OpenID community working for a distributed system of standards-based, non-proprietary user identity. It's a move we think bodes well for the web and yesterday the first big collaborative event was held since the union was announced. Facebook hosted an OpenID User Experience Summit at its headquarters in downtown Palo Alto.

Much like last month's summit on Activity Stream standards, we believe that yesterday's meeting was of historic proportion.

User Experience: Learning from the Pros

By Marshall Kirkpatrick / September 9, 2008 05:41 AM / Comments

There are more startup tech companies launching this week than almost anyone can keep track of, but any time a new service launches - one thing is key to its survival. The initial User Experience has to be compelling or any new application is going to be passed up in favor of whatever shiny object is next in line.

What's a company to do? Luckily, there are people who specialize in the field of User Experience (UX) and many of them share their best practices freely. We see applications all the time that are based on a great idea but are poorly designed in a way that leaves us frustrated and unlikely to return as users. Below are some of our favorite resources for companies that want to smarten-up quickly about User Experience.

User Interfaces Rapidly Adjusting to Information Overload

By Marshall Kirkpatrick / March 12, 2008 11:30 AM / Comments

People who in the next few years solve big problems in Information Overload are going to be very important, and some of them are going to be UI and UX (user experience) designers.

German ISP T-Online demonstrated a big multi-touch screen right out of Minority Report at the CeBIT conference in Hannover this week (see this and other videos below). Many other designers are working on variations on that theme. Other designers still are aiming to bring game-like interfaces to other data-centric experiences. What would you like to see in interface design?

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