Sat, 16 October 2010
Gerry Gaffney interviews Giles Colborne. For a transcript of this and other episodes, visit www.uxpod.com. |
Sat, 14 August 2010
Gerry Gaffney interviews Bill Albert. For a transcript of this and other episodes, visit www.uxpod.com. |
Fri, 9 July 2010
Gerry Gaffney interviews Mikael Colville-Anderson. For a transcript of this and other episodes, visit www.uxpod.com. |
Tue, 15 June 2010
Gerry Gaffney interviews Adam Greenfield on ubiquitous computing. For a transcript of this and other episodes, visit www.uxpod.com. |
Tue, 2 March 2010
Gerry Gaffney interviews Lenovo's David Hill. For a transcript of this and other episodes, visit www.uxpod.com. |
Wed, 18 November 2009
Gerry Gaffney interviews James Roberston from Step Two Designs about managing intranets. For a transcript of this and other episodes, visit www.uxpod.com. |
Tue, 3 November 2009
Gerry Gaffney interviews Shane Morris about designing for Microsoft Surface and multi-touch interfaces.
For a transcript of this and other episodes, visit www.uxpod.com. |
Thu, 23 July 2009
TramTracker is an application that runs on iPhone (and other platforms) and gives Melbourne commuters real-time information on tram movements. Robert Amos talks about developing the application. Visit www.uxpod.com for a transcript of this and other episodes. |
Sun, 21 June 2009
Gerry Gaffney interviews GerryMcGovern, author of "Killer Web Content". (This site is maintained for historical purposes only. Visit www.uxpod.com for a transcript of this and other episodes, and a searchable archive.) |
Fri, 8 May 2009
Gerry Gaffney interviews Tom Vanderbilt, author of "Why we drive the way we do (and what it says about us)". (This site is maintained for historical purposes only. Visit www.uxpod.com for a transcript of this and other episodes, and a searchable archive.) |
Mon, 27 April 2009
Gerry Gaffney interviews John Rhodes about how to sell usability, and about John's book "Selling Usability: User Experience Infiltration Tactics". Please visit www.uxpod.com for a transcript of this and other episodes. |
Sat, 28 March 2009
Gerry Gaffney interviews Marc Rettig of Fit Associates on immersion, responsible design, and working with conscious organisations. You can read a transcript at www.uxpod.com. |
Mon, 22 December 2008
Gerry Gaffney interviews Shawn Henry about the release of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines V2.0 (www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20/). A transcript of this episode is available at www.uxpod.com. Note that the User Experience Podcast is now hosted within the Information & Design website (www.infodesign.com.au) - and it's searchable. |
Wed, 24 September 2008
Gerry Gaffney interviews Ginny Redish about the communication needs of web users, about whether those needs are changing, and about how to meet them. "It's not about the words," says Ginny, "it's about helping people accomplish their goals." She says that this has led to a change from command-based to task-based communication. Ginny's book is "Letting go of the words: Writing Web Content that Works" (tinyurl.com/3m5fee). Ginny mentions the forthcoming book by Caroline Jarrett and me - that's "Forms That Work: Designing Web Forms for Usability" (tinyurl.com/44muxd). In the interests of full disclosure, I must point out that both books are in the same series. Ginny also refers to "Christensen"; that book is "The Innovator's Dilemma" (tinyurl.com/4otvnq). "Older Wiser Wired" (aarp.org/olderwiserwired) is at the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP). An article by Tom Tullis of Fidelity Investments about designing for older users (tinyurl.com/537ooa) is also online there. Gerry mentions a previous episode with Dave Grey of Xplane (www.uxpod.com/index.php?post_id=238707). (References to individual books on this website are links to Amazon.com - we earn a small commission on any purchases you make on following such links). Duration: 19:55 File size: 3.41MB |
Mon, 21 July 2008
Gerry Gaffney interviews David Jaffe about customer service. David talks about the "bizarre myth that the head of customer service is responsible for customer service", and the problems that arise from treating customer service as a cost centre. He tells us that resolution, not handling time, is what matters. David asks: Why do companies spend millions of dollars on customer research but not learn anything from the day-to-day interactions they already have? He talks about how inappropriate measures result in the the wrong behaviour from front-line staff, and what happens when IT or Marketing departments have to take responsibility for the problems they cause? David also tells us about how Amazon melts the "snowball" of repeat contacts. David's very interesting book (co-authored with Bill Price) is "The Best Service is No Service" (tinyurl.com/68mtbu). His company is Limebridge (www.limebridge.com.au) The UK company whose customer service David praises is egg (new.egg.com) Duration: 27:19 File size: 4.69MB |
Thu, 26 June 2008
Gerry Gaffney spoke to Sam Ng from Optimal Usability in New Zealand (www.optimalusability.com). Sam is responsible for OptimalSort, an online card sorting tool (www.optimalsort.com). Sam speaks about the challenges of balancing user-centred design practices with the need to meet deadlines. Do small development teams really need to use personas? Sam says software can be "too convenient" if we rely too much on stats to "spit out" answers. Sam mentions some other products: Morae (www.techsmith.com/morae.asp) Axure (www.axure.com) LiveMeeting (office.microsoft.com/livemeeting) GoTo Meeting (www.gotomeeting.com) Google Analytics (www.google.com/analytics) Crazy Egg (crazyegg.com) UserTesting.com (www.usertesting.com) BaseCamp (www.basecamphq.com) from 37 signals (www.37signals.com). Thanks to Jo Eaton for the photo of Sam. And apparently if Optimal Usability were a person it would be Jackie Chan (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackie_Chan) Duration: 17:04 File size: 2.92MB |
Sun, 27 April 2008
Gerry Gaffney conducts a wide-ranging interview with Jakob Nielsen. Is web usability where it's at? Does usability have a say on climate change? Why is the keyboard so popular? Jakob talks about having data propagate to multiple devices, about why government agencies continue to apply an outdated "waterfall' model, and about how usability can make developing countries rich quickly and thus improve the environment. He talks about the need to make things easier if you want people to do those things, about future directions in user interaction, and about the need to start small if you're budget-constrained. Jakob Nielsen's website is useit.com (www.useit.com) His company is the Nielsen Norman Group (www.nngroup.com). Jakob refers to Microsoft's Ray Ozzie (www.microsoft.com/presspass/exec/ozzie/default.mspx) and Groove (www.openp2p.com/pub/a/p2p/2000/10/24/ozzie_interview.html). He also refers to the anti-mac interface (www.useit.com/papers/anti-mac.html). Jakob's forthcoming event is usability week (www.nngroup.com/events/). Jakob's excellent books include "Usability Engineering" (tinyurl.com/4lsfdv) and "Designing Web Usability" (tinyurl.com/5ymz5t). |
Thu, 20 March 2008
Gerry Gaffney spoke to Luke Wroblewski, Senior Principal of Product Ideation & Design at Yahoo! about what web designers can learn from the world of product packaging, about 'unpacking' as a metaphor for registration, and about embracing the fact that your content will be clipped, cut, copied and embedded. Luke's forthcoming book is Web Form Design - Filling in the Blanks (www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/webforms). Luke's company is LukeW Interface Designs (www.lukew.com); his blog is Functioning Form (www.lukew.com/ff). Luke mentions Jumpcut (www.jumpcut.com). The design patterns mentioned are from Yahoo! (developer.yahoo.com/ypatterns), Jennifer Tidwell (designinginterfaces.com) and Martijn van Welie (www.welie.com/patterns/index.php). Gerry mentions a previous podcast episode (uxpod.com/index.php?post_id=122094) with Ken Carroll from ChinesePod (www.chinesepod.com), who spoke about edge competencies. We also mention CHISIG (www.chisig.org) and the VALA conference (www.vala.org.au). And the beer Luke discovered in New Zealand is from Mac's brewery (www.thebrewerybar.co.nz/shed-22-brewing-company). Duration: 20:54 File size: 3.54MB |
Tue, 11 March 2008
Gerry Gaffney spoke to Patrick Kennedy from Step Two Designs in Sydney (www.steptwo.com.au) about mentoring. What are the benefits - and the pitfalls - in mentoring? The book Patrick mentions is The Tao of Coaching, by Max Landsberg (tinyurl.com/yt8kaj). (Our book links go to Amazon, and we get a small commission from books sold in this way). Check out Patrick's Point of View blog (www.gurtle.com/ppov). Duration: 17:05 File size: 2.93MB |
Tue, 26 February 2008
Gerry Gaffney spoke to Patrick Larvie, Google's Manager of User Experience Research. Patrick reveals Google's secret - rapid user feedback, early and often. He also talks about the influence of culture on technology. The book Patrick recommends is Karaoke Nights: An Ethnographic Rhapsody, by Rob Drew (tinyurl.com/2ewbft). There was also a reference to the Google Image Labeler (images.google.com/imagelabeler). Gerry concluded with a plug for Information & Design's usability training courses in Melbourne (infodesign.com.au/training/courseschedule.asp). Duration: 34:29 File size: 5.92MB |
Sun, 17 February 2008
Gerry Gaffney spoke to Floyd Mueller about his work with exertion interfaces - where the world of video games meets the sweat of the sportsground, and where you can jog, box or play ball with people in distant locations. Floyd discusses the impact of the Nintendo Wii, and how the lessons to be learned from sports psychology can be applied to video conferencing tools. He explains that in virtual table tennis, the player puts meaning in the ball by imparting spin and force; the game carries meaning through the network; and the meaning is what matters for engagement. For interesting videos and more, check out Floyd's website (floydmueller.com), exertion interfaces (exertioninterfaces.com) and 'Remote Impact' at the distance lab (www.distancelab.org/projects/remoteimpact). Duration: 30:48 File size: 5.28MB |
Thu, 24 January 2008
Gerry Gaffney spoke to Dr. Sofia Celic of Vision Australia (www.visionaustralia.org.au) about issues faced by the visually impaired and others. Sofia says that a knowledge of accessibility should be "in any serious developer's toolkit". Two screen readers were mentioned - Jaws (www.freedomscientific.com/fs_products/software_jaws.asp) and Window-Eyes (www.gwmicro.com). OzWAI (www.ozewai.org) is the Australian Web Adaptability Initiative. Sofia mentions the Australian Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC) (www.hreoc.gov.au). Microsoft has case studies and videos online (www.microsoft.com/enable/casestudy/default.aspx). Sofia is also involved in the ongoing development of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (www.w3.org/TR/WAI-WEBCONTENT). Duration: 14:26 File size: 2.47MB |
Fri, 11 January 2008
Gerry Gaffney spoke to Daniel Szuc in Hong Kong about the state of usability today. Although we were on the 22nd floor, in the background you can hear the sounds of the Hong Kong traffic. Daniel's company is Apogee (www.apogeehk.com) The Usability Toolkit is the one Gerry and Daniel co-authored (www.theusabilitykit.com). UPA is the Usability Professionals' Association (www.upassoc.org). Disclosure: Gerry and Daniel have various commercial connections. Duration: 18:11 File size: 6.24MB |
Wed, 12 December 2007
Open Source Usability, and the Modified Delphi Card Sorting Method - an Interview with Celeste Lyn Paul
Gerry Gaffney spoke to Celeste Lyn Paul about the state of usability efforts in open source software, and about her card sorting method - the Modified Delphi. Celeste mentioned Open Usability (openusability.org) Gerry mentions a previous card-sorting episode of UXpod with Donna Maurer (tinyurl.com/3xzglj) Celeste mentioned Michael Gladwell's book 'Blink' (http://tinyurl.com/235vnd) The spreadsheet that Celeste spoke about is Joe Lamantia's on BoxesAndArrows (http://tinyurl.com/3742xt) Celeste's blog is weblog.obso1337.org Duration: 25:46 File size: 8.84MB |
Tue, 27 November 2007
Gerry Gaffney asked Brian Donohue from iQcontent (www.iqcontent.com) about when, why and how to use web analytics.
Brian talked about avoiding 'zero insight', and how you can use analytics to understand users, improve your site, and validate success. A few books and resources were mentioned: Web Analytics Demystified by Eric Peterson (tinyurl.com/ys498j) Web Analytics: An Hour a Day by Avinash Kaushik (tinyurl.com/2bnc8d) Google Analytics Shortcuts by Justin Cutroni (www.gashortcut.com) Sitescan (sitescanga.com) Emetrics (www.emetrics.org) Advanced Web Metrics is Brian Clifton's blog (www.advanced-web-metrics.com/blog/) Occam's Razor is Avinash Kaushik's blog (www.kaushik.net/avinash/) Duration: 22:49 File size: 7.83MB |
Fri, 5 October 2007
Gerry Gaffney interviews social media maven Tom Raftery. What does it mean to be a 'social media consultant'? In a wide-ranging discussion, Tom talks about:
You can follow the progress of Tom's carbon-neutral data centre - the Cork Internet Exchange (www.cix.ie/). Tom's presentation on reducing IT's carbon footprint is online (tinyurl.com/2u5bvz). Several venues and conferences are mentioned: Barcamp Galway (barcampgalway.wordpress.com/) Barcamp Dublin (www.barcampdublin.com/) Reboot Copenhagen (www.reboot.dk/) Le Web conference (www.leweb3.com/) Web 2.0 Expo (www.web2expo.com/) DLD Munich (www.dld-conference.com/) Duration: 23:17 File size: 8.2MB |
Fri, 28 September 2007
Gerry Gaffney asks Jason Furnell about designing for mobile devices. Along the way, Jason talks about the poetry of movement, the Agile development methodology, and how to navigate a career path in design. He tells us that without a vision, great minds can go to waste; and how high-fidelity wireframes can help communicate a simple vision. Jason's blog is 'the architecture of everything'. (jasonfurnell.wordpress.com) The William Gibson book is 'Spook Country'. (tinyurl.com/2a7mf9) Duration: 20:29 File size: 7.2MB |
Wed, 25 July 2007
Dave talks about giving ourselves permission to draw, about how the printing press led us to communicate in a particular way, and about how that can limit our communication in a digital environment, about how PowerPoint can be both inhibiting and comforting, and about how where we are with video today is where we were with PageMaker 20 years ago. Dave says 'You don't have to be an expert to start - you just have to start'. There are several references in this episode: Dave's blog is Communication Nation (http://communicationnation.blogspot.com/). His company is Xplane (http://www.xplane.com/). Edward Tufte's inspirational book is 'The Visual Display of Quantitative Information' (http://tinyurl.com/27dw8s). Betty Edwards' book 'Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain' can teach you to draw - even if you don't think you can (http://tinyurl.com/36jbxj). The culture map is Dave's representation of the culture at his company Xplane (http://tinyurl.com/3a27bp). Dave's 'ListMania' booklist is on Amazon.com (http://tinyurl.com/25jqas). I mentioned Lee Brimelow of Frog Design. One of his sites is the WPF blog - it contains his presentation to the Microsoft Remix conference. (http://www.thewpfblog.com/) (References to individual books on this webiste are links to Amazon.com - we earn a small commission on any purchases you make on following such links). Duration: 30:57 File size: 14.2MB |
Tue, 12 June 2007
What is the current status of Version 2 of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines? Gian Sampson-Wild tells us the story. She also explains how Flickr and Google have used Ajax without sacrificing accessibility. For more on the Maguire vs SOCOG case, see Joe Clark's reader's guide (www.contenu.nu/socog.html). A listener subsequently pointed out a USA case - National Federation of the Blind v Target, as described on the Disability Rights Advocates website (http://tinyurl.com/djrfd) - thanks elDavo. Gian's blog is The Kismet Heuristic (www.tkh.com.au). You can also read her peer review of the Samurai Errata. (samuraireview.wordpress.com) You might also want to check out the WCAG Samurai Group website (wcagsamurai.org). Gian mentions the work of Cameron Adams and Jeremy Keith. Cameron wrote 'AJAX: Usable Interactivity with Remote Scripting' (www.sitepoint.com/article/remote-scripting-ajax) in 2005. Jeremy Keith's book is 'Bulletproof Ajax' (www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0321472667/informdesign); you can read an interview with him on Digital Web magazine (www.digital-web.com/articles/jeremy_keith_2) ... and the giveaway: Andy Budd of Clearleft (clearleft.com) has donated a free ticket (worth 85 pounds sterling plus VAT) for dConstruct 2007 (2007.dconstruct.org) to a UXpod listener. To be in the draw, send an email to gerry at infodesign.com.au, with the subject line dConstruct, by June 28. Winner drawn on June 30, and notified by email. Ticket is non-transferrable, so please only enter if you or a colleague wish to attend. Duration: 16:40 File size: 11.5MB
Direct download: Web_Accessibility_Guidelines_-_an_Interview_with_GIan_Sampson-Wild.mp3
Category:podcasts -- posted at: 11:44am AEST |
Sun, 13 May 2007
Luis Arnal speaks about usability in Latin America, about poverty as the mother of creativity (imagine usability testing at stop lights), and about the importance of observational research.
Luis is founder and president of In/situm (www.insitum.com). You can read his article 'No pregunte, observe' online (PDF, in Spanish) (http://tinyurl.com/35bcch) . Luis' 2003 article which I quote from during the interview is also online (PDF, in English) (http://tinyurl.com/2gmgr9). Luis mentions Spencer Tunick's latest and largest nude shoot (18,000 people at the Zocalo plaza in Mexico city). Here is a short link to photos of the event on Flickr: http://tinyurl.com/2bvaoe Thanks to Stuart Celarier of Portland Jugglers (www.portlandjugglers.com) for permission to use the image of the Toltec juggler as an illustration for this episode. Stuart is a software engineer who blogs at www.ferncrk.com/blog and points out that the ball over the juggler's head was not present in the original. Duration: 17:30 File size: 8MB |
Tue, 17 April 2007
Peter Benda describes University of Melbourne's work on 'QuitCoach' - an online service to help people stop smoking. Peter works at Melbourne University's Department of Information Systems - www.dis.unimelb.edu.au He talks about some of the unique aspects of this research - such as participatory design as therapy, and the 'confessional' needs of the quitting smoker. The current version of QuitCoach is at www.thequitcoach.org.au The National Health & Medical Research Council of Australia is at www.nhmrc.gov.au The New Zealand STOMP (Stop smoking with mobile phones) trial is at www.ctru.auckland.ac.nz/research/stomp/index.html Florian 'Floyd' Muller's paper is 'A table tennis game for three players' - http://tinyurl.com/3ylovs ... and the Northcote Social Club (Melbourne) is at http://northcotesocialclub.com/pages/giglist.php Duration: 24:25 File size: 11.1MB |
Fri, 30 March 2007
What makes good customer service? Joel talks about fixing everything two ways, not outsourcing technical support, taking the blame, and about the puppet. Check out Joel's blog (http://www.joelonsoftware.com) I mention the Irish Guitar Podcast (http://www.irishguitarpod.com) Daniel Szuc and I wrote The Usability Kit (http://www.theusabilitykit.com). Duration: 23:10 File size: 10.6MB |
Fri, 2 March 2007
Steve Krug talks about clarity, about deleting Solitaire from his Mac, and about his admiration for Douglas Adams and Jakob Nielsen.
He also considers how we can do things well with Ajax, and the importance of user testing. Steve's excellent book is "Don't Make Me Think" (www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0321344758/informdesign ). Steve also mentioned Jakob Nielsen's article on teengers' use of websites (http://www.useit.com/alertbox/20050131.html) People ask me about the cartoons on UXpod. Most are done by Gina Ellis, but this one is by Naomi Tong. This episode is just over 23 minutes in length. File size is 10.5MB. |
Mon, 19 February 2007
William Gaver is Professor of Design at
He developed the 'cultural probe' user research technique. (We covered this in a previous podcast episode with John Murphy - uxpod.libsyn.com/index.php?post_id=108708) He also developed the 'drift table' and other items based around the concept of 'ludic' design. In this interview, he talks about ludic design, and about systems that can help us while we 'find our own ways of leading meaningful lives'. Sound quality, unfortunately, is not very good. The book Bill mentions is Homo Ludens, by Johan Huizinga (www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0807046817/informdesign). Bill also mentioned Andy Crabtree (web.mac.com/andy.crabtree/iWeb/Site/Home.html). See the Interaction Research pages at Goldsmiths College (www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/interaction/exhibitions.html) The company that provided the aerial footage is getmapping (www.getmapping.com). Duration: 21:46 File size: 9.97MB |
Wed, 31 January 2007
Genevieve Bell is Director of Intel's User Experience Group. In this interview, she talks about what it means to build technology with the home in mind, about cultural influences in the use of technology, about the connection between religion and technology, and about sheds. "Computational power is important but what people see is the experience." |
Wed, 17 January 2007
Security and usability are frequently in conflict. Workarounds are common, and there may be unrealistic expectations of what users would or should do. I mention that ChinesePod made Time Magazine's Top Ten Podcasts of 2006. (www.time.com/time/topten/2006/podcasts/10.html) The Usability Kit (Gaffney/Szuc) is available for purchase online. (www.theusabilitykit.com) This episode is 7 minutes 10 seconds in duration. File size is 4.1MB. |
Mon, 25 December 2006
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Tue, 12 December 2006
I asked Alan Cooper (over a rather echoing connection) why he is outraged by bad software, and how he developed the concept of 'personas'. I was interested to hear the 'father of Visual Basic' say 'What I need is a computer that doesn't make me feel bad and a cellphone that doesn't make me feel stupid'. Alan's company is Cooper Consulting (www.cooper.com) The two books of his that I mentioned are: The Inmates Are Running the Asylum: Why High Tech Products Drive Us Crazy and How to Restore the Sanity (www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0672326140/informdesign) About Face 2.0: The Essentials of Interaction Design (www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0764526413/informdesign) This episode is 19 minutes 44 seconds in duration. File size is 11.3MB. |
Sun, 26 November 2006
Erin Smith is a Senior Voice User Interface Designer and Usability Specialist with Syntellect (www.syntellect.com). Incidentally, people in the field use the word "vooey" - this is a pronunciation of VUI (Voice User Interface). Erin mentioned two books: "Voice User Interface Design" by Michael Cohen (www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0321185765 /informdesign). "The Art and Business of Speech Recognition: Creating the Noble Voice" by Blade Kotelly (www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0321154924/informdesign). Paul English's "get human" website is www.gethuman.com. And here's a link to the episode in which I interviewed Donna Maurer on card sorting: http://uxpod.libsyn.com/index.php?post_id=126130 Optimal Usability is the New Zealand-based usability firm mentioned (www.optimalusability.co.nz). This episode is 16 minutes 36 seconds in duration. File size is 9.5MB. |
Tue, 14 November 2006
Karen Loasby is the information architecture team leader for the BBC. I spoke to her about metadata, taxonomy and related topics. How do you manage metadata issues when you're dealing with millions of pages, and thousands of authors? Karen referred to two sites during our discussion. The BBC Feed Factory is http://www.bbc.co.uk/feedfactory/ and Etsy is http://www.etsy.com You might also want to check out Karen's article "Changing Approaches to Metadata at bbc.co.uk: From Chaos to Control and Then Letting Go Again" (http://www.asis.org/Bulletin/Oct-06/loasby.html) and her presentation on "The Growing Pains of a Controlled Vocabulary" for the 2005 IA Summit http://iasummit.org/2005/finalpapers/66_Presentation.ppt (this is in PowerPoint and is around 260kB). This episode is 18 minutes 20 seconds in duration. File size is 8.6MB. |
Mon, 6 November 2006
This podcast contains four short interviews from User Friendly 2006, the UPA China conference in Hangzhou. UPA is the Usability Professionals' Association. I spoke to Jason Huang, Giles Colborne, Daniel Szuc and Paul Sherman. UPA China 's website is www.upachina.org, and you can find links to the conference there. Giles' company is cxpartners (www.cxpartners.co.uk) Daniel's company is Apogee (www.apogeehk.com) Paul maintains the Usability Blog (www.usabilityblog.com/blog/) Flickr tag for photos from the conference is UF2006 (http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=UF2006). |
Mon, 23 October 2006
Users of Hong Kong's public transport system will be familiar with the Octopus card, which I consider to be exemplary in terms of the user experience it offers. In this brief episode, I talk about some of the things that make it so easy to use. For information on the training mentioned at the end of the podcast, refer to the Information & Design website (http://www.infodesign.com.au/training/default.asp). |
Mon, 9 October 2006
I spoke to Jared Braiterman, from jaredRESEARCH (www.jaredresearch.com). Jared has done ethnographic research many organisations. I asked him what's meant by ethongraphic research, and how it's applied. The Mobile China work Jared refers to is avaialble on his site (www.jaredresearch.com/mobilechina). The book on user research that he mentions is Mike Kuniavsky's Observing the User Experience (www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1558609237/informdesign) - a book which I coincidentally described on my infodesign.com.au website as "the only 'must-read' book in the field published in 2003". (References to books on this webiste are links to Amazon.com - we earn a small commission on any purchases you make on following such links). |
Mon, 2 October 2006
Elizabeth Rosenweig is principal of Bubble Mountain Consulting (www.bubblemtn.com). I spoke to her in her capacity as Director of World Usability Day (www.worldusabilityday.org). Why do we need a World Usability Day, and will it make the world a better place? How can you get involved? Find out from Elizabeth! |
Fri, 22 September 2006
I asked John Berenyi of Bergent Research (www.bergent.com.au) why usability people are sometimes disparaging of market researchers. John has some interesting thoughts about about good - and bad - market research. The book John mentions is Vance Packard's "The Hidden Persuaders". (www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0671531492/informdesign). John is correct in his statement that Vance Packard died (in 1996). There's a reference to Paco Underhill in the podcast. His book "Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping" (www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0684849143/informdesign) is an interesting read. (References to books on this webiste are links to Amazon.com - we earn a small commission on any purchases you make on following such links). |
Tue, 19 September 2006
This short podcast considers the fact that we tend to get dazzled by the 'bling' of new technologies. |
Mon, 11 September 2006
I spoke to Donna Maurer on the topic of card sorting. I think she has a very nice and practical approach to card sorting. Donna referred to the OzIA conference (http://www.oz-ia.org/2006/) which takes place on September 30 and October 1 2006 in sunny Sydney. You should also check out Donna's blog (http://maadmob.net/donna/blog/) if you're interested in Information Architecture. You can also keep up with news on Donna's forthcoming book on card-sorting (http://www.rosenfeldmedia.com/books/cardsorting/). |
Tue, 5 September 2006
I asked Jesse James Garrett about his "Nine Pillars of Successful Web Teams" model. See Jesse's article (on the Adaptive Path website) for the graphical representation of his model, and his brief article on the subject. I highly recommend Jesse's book "The Elements of User Experience", which is a model of clarity. Jesse's website is well worth a visit for his thoughts on information architecture, user experience design, and his visual vocabulary for information architecture and interaction design. (References to books on this webiste are links to Amazon.com - we earn a small commission on any purchases you make on following such links). |
Tue, 29 August 2006
Good feedback is important at the User Interface and Process levels. This brief episode considers some of the elements invovled in providing good feedback. If you like the User Experience podcast, you might want to check out Tim & Tom's Design Critique podcast podcast. I met Tim at UPA in June, and he provided both encouragement and practical advice that helped get the User Experience Podcast up and running - thanks Tim. |
Mon, 21 August 2006
I spoke to fellow Irishman Ken Carroll of ChinesePod - a highly successful online language learning business based in Shanghai. A key component of the ChinesePod success is a very strong focus on user needs and the user experience. In this interview, Ken describes the philospophy that drives ChinesePod, and how it can apply to other businesses. The Hangzhou conference that Ken refers to is User Friendly, which will take place in November. |
Thu, 17 August 2006
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Thu, 10 August 2006
To err is human. This episode is a brief discussion of why people make mistakes, and what we can do to minimise errors.
The two books mentioned are: |
Tue, 1 August 2006
Choosing the appropriate user research technique can be difficult - particularly if you're not experienced in doing so.
This short podcast considers how you decide what types of activity you should undertake. |
Tue, 18 July 2006
I spoke to Josephine Wong from
Apogee - Usability in Asia about the state of usability in China. Josephine mentions the "User Friendly" conference. That's run by UPA China. Disclosure: Apogee and my company, Information & Design, work together from time to time. |
Tue, 11 July 2006
The Cultural Probes technique provides a way to explore the user's world when other methods are not available or appropriate. Gerry Gaffney discusses the technique with John Murphy, of Design4Use. Note that this interivew was updated on July 17 to provide some additional detail.
Direct download: Cultural_Probes_-_an_Interview_with_John_Murphy.mp3
Category:podcasts -- posted at: 6:06pm AEST |
Tue, 4 July 2006
We often encounter rules of thumb. This brief podcast discusses "3 clicks" "7 plus or minus 2", and the application of such rules.
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