ºÝºÝߣshows by User: sshall / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif ºÝºÝߣshows by User: sshall / Tue, 10 Nov 2015 23:20:52 GMT ºÝºÝߣShare feed for ºÝºÝߣshows by User: sshall SMS_PurplePaperNGG_Screen /slideshow/smspurplepapernggscreen/54975244 3d423b26-92a3-4ed5-b99d-b4013648817f-151110232052-lva1-app6892
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Tue, 10 Nov 2015 23:20:52 GMT /slideshow/smspurplepapernggscreen/54975244 sshall@slideshare.net(sshall) SMS_PurplePaperNGG_Screen sshall <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/3d423b26-92a3-4ed5-b99d-b4013648817f-151110232052-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br>
SMS_PurplePaperNGG_Screen from Stephen Hall
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Architecting happiness in the age of digital government /slideshow/architecting-happiness-in-the-age-of-digital-government/45241272 architectinghappinessintheageofdigitalgovernmentpdf-150227160025-conversion-gate02
Australian governments are on the brink of a period of significant digital change, driven by global forces which are transforming our society overall. This digital transformation will see focus not only on pervasive high quality end user experience, but also the experiences delivered at other points of the government service value chain, and changes needed to underlying organisational functions necessary to deliver services. So, what does this mean for us as architects of information and experiences? This talk looks at the emerging Digital Government landscape and the opportunities this presents for experience practitioners.]]>

Australian governments are on the brink of a period of significant digital change, driven by global forces which are transforming our society overall. This digital transformation will see focus not only on pervasive high quality end user experience, but also the experiences delivered at other points of the government service value chain, and changes needed to underlying organisational functions necessary to deliver services. So, what does this mean for us as architects of information and experiences? This talk looks at the emerging Digital Government landscape and the opportunities this presents for experience practitioners.]]>
Fri, 27 Feb 2015 16:00:25 GMT /slideshow/architecting-happiness-in-the-age-of-digital-government/45241272 sshall@slideshare.net(sshall) Architecting happiness in the age of digital government sshall Australian governments are on the brink of a period of significant digital change, driven by global forces which are transforming our society overall. This digital transformation will see focus not only on pervasive high quality end user experience, but also the experiences delivered at other points of the government service value chain, and changes needed to underlying organisational functions necessary to deliver services. So, what does this mean for us as architects of information and experiences? This talk looks at the emerging Digital Government landscape and the opportunities this presents for experience practitioners. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/architectinghappinessintheageofdigitalgovernmentpdf-150227160025-conversion-gate02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Australian governments are on the brink of a period of significant digital change, driven by global forces which are transforming our society overall. This digital transformation will see focus not only on pervasive high quality end user experience, but also the experiences delivered at other points of the government service value chain, and changes needed to underlying organisational functions necessary to deliver services. So, what does this mean for us as architects of information and experiences? This talk looks at the emerging Digital Government landscape and the opportunities this presents for experience practitioners.
Architecting happiness in the age of digital government from Stephen Hall
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Making light work of data- improving the UX of data rich interfaces- UX Australia /slideshow/making-light-work-of-data-improving-the-ux-of-data-rich-interfaces-ux-australia/2027825 uxofdatarichinterfaces1-0-090920180909-phpapp02
Not so long ago, back in the days of brochure ware online, we used to be glad just to see live data dished up in web sites. It was real, it was (sometimes) up to date, even if it was also inevitably dry, dense and tabular, and was often only there to be looked at. Those of us making web sites then didn’t have too many data presentation options; our challenge was usually just to make it as clean and fast loading as possible. How we have moved on! These days, the web browser is a window onto a sea of rich data. Now, we expect to be able to understand it, personalise how we view it, add our own input to it and transact with it. At the same time, the volume of what is available threatens to overwhelm us. In short, the User Experience of data has changed completely. Public and private sector organisations are increasingly willing and able to expose aspects of their data both internally and externally, and are using the web as a key channel to do so. Looking internationally we are starting to see pressure on governments to ‘open source’ key data holdings to allow organisations, community groups and individuals to re-use it creatively and in ways that government owners would never imagine. The reality is that User Experience designers and Information Architects are more and more likely to be dealing regularly with the challenges of rich data presentation. This talk examines some approaches to the analysis and presentation of rich data sets on the web. Drawing on the presenter’s own direct experiences from large scale projects in the pharmaceutical, educational, aged care and consumer advocacy sectors.]]>

Not so long ago, back in the days of brochure ware online, we used to be glad just to see live data dished up in web sites. It was real, it was (sometimes) up to date, even if it was also inevitably dry, dense and tabular, and was often only there to be looked at. Those of us making web sites then didn’t have too many data presentation options; our challenge was usually just to make it as clean and fast loading as possible. How we have moved on! These days, the web browser is a window onto a sea of rich data. Now, we expect to be able to understand it, personalise how we view it, add our own input to it and transact with it. At the same time, the volume of what is available threatens to overwhelm us. In short, the User Experience of data has changed completely. Public and private sector organisations are increasingly willing and able to expose aspects of their data both internally and externally, and are using the web as a key channel to do so. Looking internationally we are starting to see pressure on governments to ‘open source’ key data holdings to allow organisations, community groups and individuals to re-use it creatively and in ways that government owners would never imagine. The reality is that User Experience designers and Information Architects are more and more likely to be dealing regularly with the challenges of rich data presentation. This talk examines some approaches to the analysis and presentation of rich data sets on the web. Drawing on the presenter’s own direct experiences from large scale projects in the pharmaceutical, educational, aged care and consumer advocacy sectors.]]>
Sun, 20 Sep 2009 18:09:00 GMT /slideshow/making-light-work-of-data-improving-the-ux-of-data-rich-interfaces-ux-australia/2027825 sshall@slideshare.net(sshall) Making light work of data- improving the UX of data rich interfaces- UX Australia sshall Not so long ago, back in the days of brochure ware online, we used to be glad just to see live data dished up in web sites. It was real, it was (sometimes) up to date, even if it was also inevitably dry, dense and tabular, and was often only there to be looked at. Those of us making web sites then didn’t have too many data presentation options; our challenge was usually just to make it as clean and fast loading as possible. How we have moved on! These days, the web browser is a window onto a sea of rich data. Now, we expect to be able to understand it, personalise how we view it, add our own input to it and transact with it. At the same time, the volume of what is available threatens to overwhelm us. In short, the User Experience of data has changed completely. Public and private sector organisations are increasingly willing and able to expose aspects of their data both internally and externally, and are using the web as a key channel to do so. Looking internationally we are starting to see pressure on governments to ‘open source’ key data holdings to allow organisations, community groups and individuals to re-use it creatively and in ways that government owners would never imagine. The reality is that User Experience designers and Information Architects are more and more likely to be dealing regularly with the challenges of rich data presentation. This talk examines some approaches to the analysis and presentation of rich data sets on the web. Drawing on the presenter’s own direct experiences from large scale projects in the pharmaceutical, educational, aged care and consumer advocacy sectors. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/uxofdatarichinterfaces1-0-090920180909-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Not so long ago, back in the days of brochure ware online, we used to be glad just to see live data dished up in web sites. It was real, it was (sometimes) up to date, even if it was also inevitably dry, dense and tabular, and was often only there to be looked at. Those of us making web sites then didn’t have too many data presentation options; our challenge was usually just to make it as clean and fast loading as possible. How we have moved on! These days, the web browser is a window onto a sea of rich data. Now, we expect to be able to understand it, personalise how we view it, add our own input to it and transact with it. At the same time, the volume of what is available threatens to overwhelm us. In short, the User Experience of data has changed completely. Public and private sector organisations are increasingly willing and able to expose aspects of their data both internally and externally, and are using the web as a key channel to do so. Looking internationally we are starting to see pressure on governments to ‘open source’ key data holdings to allow organisations, community groups and individuals to re-use it creatively and in ways that government owners would never imagine. The reality is that User Experience designers and Information Architects are more and more likely to be dealing regularly with the challenges of rich data presentation. This talk examines some approaches to the analysis and presentation of rich data sets on the web. Drawing on the presenter’s own direct experiences from large scale projects in the pharmaceutical, educational, aged care and consumer advocacy sectors.
Making light work of data- improving the UX of data rich interfaces- UX Australia from Stephen Hall
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-sshall-48x48.jpg?cb=1522807845 Principal Consultant leading SMS's work in the growing areas of Customer Experience improvement and Digital Government. www.smsmst.com https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/3d423b26-92a3-4ed5-b99d-b4013648817f-151110232052-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/smspurplepapernggscreen/54975244 SMS_PurplePaperNGG_Screen https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/architectinghappinessintheageofdigitalgovernmentpdf-150227160025-conversion-gate02-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/architecting-happiness-in-the-age-of-digital-government/45241272 Architecting happiness... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/uxofdatarichinterfaces1-0-090920180909-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/making-light-work-of-data-improving-the-ux-of-data-rich-interfaces-ux-australia/2027825 Making light work of d...