Part 1
1. I feel extremely grateful that I am able to do things that I take for granted like using a public restroom. 2. I think designing things in mind with everyone including the average person and people who may be handicapped. If that is not possible, create separate spaces meant for each type of person. 3. It is called being in their shoes or thinking from their perspective. It helps us understand how others may feel from their point of view. Part 2 1. UI/UX designer, UX researcher, Information architect 2. Don Norman when he worked for Apple 3. Norman studied electrical engineering and mathematical psychology at MIT 4. The Design of Everyday Things 5. discoverability and understanding 6. They are visuals that people should be able to understand without any explanations. 7. These are visual signs that explicitly tell the user what is happening. 8. These are the Seven Stages of Action 9. It can result in products that end up being waste once the product become outdated. 10. Steve Jobs said that quote. It is important to start at the user so the product will build off the needs of the user and will benefit the user. Part 3 I think the Twitter mobile app and the iMessage app has great UI. The Twitter app has a bar where you can switch from the home and the trending tab. These two tabs are also the most used, and they are the first 2 tabs. The message shows all my recent messages and shows me the most recent message. This is really useful for me to see what we were talking about. The pinned messages also help me access frequent people I message.
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1. What is one thing that you learned from Chip Kidd?
I learned how to use clarity and mystery to improve designs. I think it helps the user become more intrigued the piece but not confused. 2. Would you like to do the same type of design as Chip, why or why not? I would like to a similar deign because it seems very interesting trying to get deeper meaning out of superficial objects. |
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