Archives:
Interaction design

All about devices and situations with which a user can interact.

Cartographies of Imagination

“Cartographies of Imagination, by me, Sarah B. Nelson, is about navigating the world of collaboration, through methods, tools, techniques and ideas. I’ll share methods, tools, and ideas to inspire you to draw on the collective wisdom around you. I’m an interaction designer and design strategist at Adaptive Path.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Friday, September 28th, 2007 at 9:01 am
Also published in Communications, Creativity | Comments Off



Transition from Visual Design to Interaction Design

“Over the past month at Planet Argon, I’ve been taking on more interaction design work. Mostly because there’s a gap to be filled with all the design work on our plate, but also because I said I was willing to take it on. Visual design to interaction design doesn’t seem like a huge transition on the surface (it’s all design right?), but it has really been a challenge.

Maybe I’m still hanging out in the web standards design blogosphere too much, but finding IxD & IA blogs to read have been few and far between. The ones I have found get updated once every 8 months or so. In an effort to spread the knowledge, here are some initial thoughts and experiences from an IxD n00b…” (Thanks Airbag!)

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 at 12:19 pm
Also published in Graphic design | Comments Off



Adaptive Path’s User Experience Week 2007

“Under the guidance of experienced practitioners from Adaptive Path and other top companies, this four-day conference introduces user experience practitioners to new rich internet application design approaches, practical prototyping techniques, effective cross-organization communications strategies and more.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Friday, July 6th, 2007 at 12:04 am
Also published in Internet, Software & technology | Comments Off



Interaction Design Style (My IA Summit 2007 Presentation)

“It’s been a little less than a week since my IA Summit presentation. To my great surprise, it went really well. I mean really well. In the next day or so I will be posting a summary of my experiences preparing and discussing my topic, which was, in a word, style. Many people came to me after my presentation asking me not only to post the slides themselves, but also to post the reading list since I did discuss a lot of books and sites that deeply influenced my thinking.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Monday, April 9th, 2007 at 8:21 am
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Why interactive websites can create false memories

“Can an interactive web site produce false memories? Possibly so, according to a fascinating paper to be published this month in the Journal of Consumer Research by Ann Schlosser, a business professor at the University of Washington. Schlosser performed an intriguing experiment: She took two groups of people and had them check out two different web sites devoted to the same digital camera. One site included static pictures; the other was interactive, allowing users to play around with a virtual version of the product. Later, she tested them on their ability to recall details about the camera. She intentionally included details that were false, but sufficiently plausible that they might have been true. The result? The people who viewed the interactive demo of the camera were much more likely than the folks who’d only viewed static images to ‘remember’ the false details as being present. Or another way of putting it: The interactive demo was more likely to produce false memories of the product — potential buyers who thought the camera could do things it can’t.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Thursday, December 7th, 2006 at 12:13 pm
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No Instruction Necessary (Affordance)

“Affordance is one of the more important elements of design; one closely tied to usability. In fact, without proper affordances the rest of the design doesn’t matter — it will simply fail, partially or entirely. An affordance is a property of an object or environment that indicates how it can or should be used.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Wednesday, June 7th, 2006 at 7:30 am
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Sparklines powered by Bissantz

“Embedded in Management Information Systems, sparklines efficiently add context and reduce the recency bias prevalent in data analysis and decision-making. Sparklines enrich data displays on mobile devices and are a prerequisite for effective mobile controlling concepts… In order to enable a wide public to benefit from sparklines, we offer an Add-in for Microsoft Office that creates sparklines. The sparklines are generated either as bitmaps or from specifically crafted TrueType Fonts (TTF), the Bissantz SparkFonts, which allows for continuous scaling and razor-sharp printouts.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Wednesday, March 22nd, 2006 at 6:16 am
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The Role of Metaphor in Interaction Design

“The role of metaphor in interaction design has oft been maligned and usually misunderstood. Metaphor has been called ‘not only unhelpful, but harmful’ (Cooper, 1995) in design, and is typically thought of as being limiting, scaling poorly, and leading to faulty thinking about how products work.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Monday, May 23rd, 2005 at 7:45 am
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Blinking Out Design

“One of my colleagues at Adaptive Path often refers to design as being derived from user research. I can certainly see how one would come to that conclusion. In many of our projects, we’ll do a bunch of user interviews, generate a model based on the analysis of the transcripts, and map an architecture to that model. That becomes a foundation for the web site, and thus the user experience. I believe in this approach, but it’s just not at all how I work. Rather, I find my designs are more often inspired by research. I find that the best designs I’ve created are produced more like writing songs or short stories than conducting an experiment using the scientific method. They just hit me. So it was revealing to read Malcolm Gladwell’s ‘Blink’ in which he discusses split-second decisions…”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Monday, April 4th, 2005 at 7:33 am
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Czerwinski on Vizualization

From ACM’s Ubiquity: “Mary Czerwinski is Senior Researcher and Group Manager Visualization and Interaction Research Group at Microsoft Research.”

Posted by Bill Keaggy on Wednesday, January 26th, 2005 at 7:53 am
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Kronos video

Sample visual
Check out this video we made for Kronos to help celebrate International Women's Day, 2011. Learn more in this xBlog post or jump over to YouTube and watch it there.

Azure poster

Sample visual
XPLANE | Dachis Group developed a A vibrant, engaging poster showing how Microsoft Azure enables developers to run applications and store data on Microsoft servers. The poster recently took top honors in the American Business Awards.

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