際際滷shows by User: LukeFestForsythe / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: LukeFestForsythe / Tue, 08 Mar 2016 12:48:54 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: LukeFestForsythe The UI of Everyday Things: What can UX learn from Product Design? /slideshow/the-ui-of-everyday-things-what-can-ux-learn-from-product-design/59255888 thedesignofeverydaythings-productdesignpixelsv6-upload-160308124854
Talk from UX People 2013: At some point in 1945, after the Second World War, someone decided that product design was a thing. For almost 70 years designers have been putting special effort into the tools we make, observing how theyre received and adjusting the process accordingly. Fast forward to today and the world is a vastly different place. Our tools have evolved. UX has arisen as a discipline. But people are the same. Are we reinventing the wheel? In this talk Luke will be looking at what UX practitioners can learn from what is deemed traditional product design and how they can apply it to their own UX process. He will also examine how apps should be designed more like tools than websites and how UX designers should be able to take on more of a holistic role; actually focusing on the end user, above all else.]]>

Talk from UX People 2013: At some point in 1945, after the Second World War, someone decided that product design was a thing. For almost 70 years designers have been putting special effort into the tools we make, observing how theyre received and adjusting the process accordingly. Fast forward to today and the world is a vastly different place. Our tools have evolved. UX has arisen as a discipline. But people are the same. Are we reinventing the wheel? In this talk Luke will be looking at what UX practitioners can learn from what is deemed traditional product design and how they can apply it to their own UX process. He will also examine how apps should be designed more like tools than websites and how UX designers should be able to take on more of a holistic role; actually focusing on the end user, above all else.]]>
Tue, 08 Mar 2016 12:48:54 GMT /slideshow/the-ui-of-everyday-things-what-can-ux-learn-from-product-design/59255888 LukeFestForsythe@slideshare.net(LukeFestForsythe) The UI of Everyday Things: What can UX learn from Product Design? LukeFestForsythe Talk from UX People 2013: At some point in 1945, after the Second World War, someone decided that product design was a thing. For almost 70 years designers have been putting special effort into the tools we make, observing how theyre received and adjusting the process accordingly. Fast forward to today and the world is a vastly different place. Our tools have evolved. UX has arisen as a discipline. But people are the same. Are we reinventing the wheel? In this talk Luke will be looking at what UX practitioners can learn from what is deemed traditional product design and how they can apply it to their own UX process. He will also examine how apps should be designed more like tools than websites and how UX designers should be able to take on more of a holistic role; actually focusing on the end user, above all else. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/thedesignofeverydaythings-productdesignpixelsv6-upload-160308124854-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Talk from UX People 2013: At some point in 1945, after the Second World War, someone decided that product design was a thing. For almost 70 years designers have been putting special effort into the tools we make, observing how theyre received and adjusting the process accordingly. Fast forward to today and the world is a vastly different place. Our tools have evolved. UX has arisen as a discipline. But people are the same. Are we reinventing the wheel? In this talk Luke will be looking at what UX practitioners can learn from what is deemed traditional product design and how they can apply it to their own UX process. He will also examine how apps should be designed more like tools than websites and how UX designers should be able to take on more of a holistic role; actually focusing on the end user, above all else.
The UI of Everyday Things: What can UX learn from Product Design? from Luke Forsythe
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-LukeFestForsythe-48x48.jpg?cb=1522983706 Over the last 6 years, I have been fortunate enough to do UX & Ul work for the likes of Tesco, Barclaycard, RIM, Vodafone, AT&T, The BBC, Cadburys, Adidas and Britvic. Specialties - User-centred design; digital product/service, UX and visual design. - Deep understanding of lean UX principles of make, test, iterate and the value of minimum viable product soft launches. - Proficient and flexible in producing deliverables on a project-by-project basis: Photoshop, Illustrator, Axure, Omnigraffle etc. - Experience and love of working with front and back-end tech experts to work out the boundaries... so we can push them! lukef.com