Posts Tagged ‘web’

Policy Trainwreck: How Copyright Law Failed the Digital Age

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009
Brian Zisk - SanFran MusicTech Summit
Dave Allen - Nemo/Pampelmoose.com
Jonathan Coulton - Jonathan Coulton
Michael Petricone - Consumer Electronics Association
Samantha Murphy - The Highway Girl
  • Copyright is supressing new art, not protecting existing art
  • This is an ok panel but not nearly as interesting as I’d hoped. Feels a bit like preaching to the choir.
  • A good point: it’s not a music crisis, it’s a CD selling crisis.
  • Is it copyright that’s rigid or the companies that hold the copyrights? Unfortunately I didn’t get the answer out of the response.

Browser Wars III: The Platform Wins

Monday, March 16th, 2009
Arun Ranganathan - Mozilla
Chris Wilson - Microsoft
Brendan Eich - Mozilla Foundation
Charles McCathieNevile - Opera Software
Darin Fisher - Google

  • No single majority browser, platform wins
  • IE guy: “My wifes computer got hacked” Mozilla guy: “What browser was she using?”

An interesting talk but overall not much to take note of.

Presenting Straight to the Brain

Monday, March 16th, 2009
Jared Goralnick - AwayFind
Cliff Atkinson - BBP Media
Craig Ball - Craig D Ball PC
Kathy Sierra - CreatingPassionateUsers
Cliff Atkinson
  • World is full of things competing for our attention, stress, stimuli, time, etc
  • engage your audience, understand their psychology
  • we use bullet points because we’ve always used bullet points, not because they’re good
  • We assume that we can slap a bunch of info up on something and the viewers will just understand it
  • Sensory memory, long-term memory, working memory: sensory and long-term are “infinite” but working memory is only capable of storing 3-4 things at a time
  • 1.) respect the limits of the mind, 2.) Sync the two channels (visual & verbal), 3.) guide attention, show specifically what the viewer should be paying attention to
Kathy Sierra
  • Modern world, legacy cave-man brain
  • Brain has a spam filter, but it can be pretty lizardy
  • Brain pays more attention to chemistry, are nothing but expectation mechanisms
  • joy = play = learning survival
  • brains love to resolve things, fill things in, what is the story?
  • Brain doesn’t care about code
  • Talk to the brain, not to the mind (they’re in an epic battle)
Craig Ball
  • Weiss-McGraff study
  • Move in a non-linear manner
  • The “Ken Burns Effect”
  • Break things down into easily understood metaphors, slowly introduce new concepts that build on the previous
Q&A
  • Mistakes: folks use the screen as the speaker when it should be used for the visual; Brochure vs manual; If you put text on a page while speaking the brain is going to have to choose which to pay attention to
  • Equip users with the information, let them come to their own conclusions
  • What is the story thread? Would you put bullet points in a movie?
  • Is a bullet point the best way to anchor information in the brain? No? Then use something else.
  • Don’t make a better presentation of X, make a better user of X
  • Blackberry prayer mode -> Failure to communicate - Ball
  • LOL: “Trying to compose the bon mot haiku for the most interesting twitter” - Ball
  • Always ask yourself about every slide: “Does it have a pulse?” Make every slide beg for its life - Sierra

Design for the Wisdom of Crowds

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

Derek Powazek - Powazek Productions

  • Wisdom of Crowds - James Surowiecki
  • Doesn’t mean a group of people in a room are automagically smart
  • Starts with Francis Galton (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Galton); guess the amount games, average of crowd is usually pretty close to actual
  • Most emailed stories, NYT
  • So why is the collective wisdom of the internet so dumb? (See YouTube comments)

Bringing WOC online

Small Simple Tasks

  • simple rating systems (hotornot.com, threadless.com)
  • Wired.com assignment zero: started out with too large of task. Nobody wanted to volunteer. Broke it down into simple segments, assignments accomplished

Large Diverse Groups

  • Shuttle disaster: centralized group of people who ignored the larger crowd; happens when people put the group ahead of themselves (don’t want to stand out, risk alienation)
  • Chevy Tahoe crowd sourced advertisement debacle
  • Large diverse groups means more input coming in, more resistant to group-think

Design For Selfishness

  • People will not participate in your thing unless they’re getting something from it (doesn’t give us a free pass, people will call/not do anything)

Result Aggregation

  • How do you take the aggregate (the score) without turning into a game of winners and losers?
  • The Heisenberg Problem: Once you have a leaderboard, people will want to show up on it and may not use nice means of doing it
  • Instead of showing a ranked list have a list of just good stuff
  • Threadless: don’t show rating until voting has ended
  • Popularity does NOT have to rule: Amazon.com product review page - most helpful positive review and most helpful negative review displayed with equal weight

Implicit vs. Explicit Feedback

  • Explicit: voting and rating
  • If you can’t think of a reason to use thumbs up or thumbs down, don’t.
  • Implicit: pageviews, searches, velocity, interestingness

Design Matters

  • How you ask the questions changes the answers you get
  • Visual cues can even effect tone of feedback
  • Red vs. Blue: color affects recall, memory. Red gets people worked up, more attention to detail to prevent failure. Blue makes people laid back and more receptive to emotional responses.

Putting It All Together

  • http://brooklynmuseum.org/exhibitions/click - Asked community to rate themselves, then rate art; crowd curation
  • http://getsatisfaction.com/apple - Simple “I agree” button; can also add comment, comments bubble up to top based on favorites; includes simple stats/aggregation; mood rater

Seeing Things

  • Our brains will make up a story to make our experiences make sense
  • Online removes all sensory inputs, we just have lines of text: our brains work twice as hard to fill in those lacking inputs
  • Getting people to feel like they’re in touch with something they’re used to can alleviate a lot of anxiety in an unfamiliar experience

Prog thoughts

  • We rely very much on explicit feedback, I would even put our tracking metrics in the category
  • we need to friendly up our feedback form ASAP
  • Self-rating display (Brooklyn Museum) sounds a lot like Bobby’s covg project
  • How cool would it be to have a mood display on our feedback pages for unpopular flows? Customers that feel validated feel happier

Web Typography: Quit Bitchin’ and Get Your Glyph On

Saturday, March 14th, 2009

Richard Rutter - Clearleft Ltd
Ian Coyle - iancoyle.com
Samantha Warren - Viget Labs
Jonathan Tan - OmniTI Inc
Elliot Jay Stocks

(Insert pic here)

  • panel catalyst - AEA: A Not So Sweet Tale of Digital Type

Why do web designers bitch about typography?

  • Frustration with limited palette
  • Variations in rendering btwn operating systems

What are the best ways to currently implement web typography?

  • Use what’s available. Vista actually has some decent typefaces
  • http://questionablecharacters.com
  • Start with the core fonts and see where you can get. Don’t just jump straight to SIFR

How will we be able to implement web typography in the future?

  • font-face, still need conditional comments for IE

Will font-linking be the death nell or a renaissance for typographers?

  • Yes and no. Maybe. No clear answer.
  • My opinion? Open-source could be a great thing for web typography.
  • If you have to you can restrict access to linked fonts with .htaccess

Tips

  • Go read: http://webtypography.net
  • Pick a regular font and run with it, make it look good
  • Check out CSS3 fonts module
  • Check out Open Type

Designing For Irrational Behaviour

Saturday, March 14th, 2009
Peter Whybrow - UCLA Semel Institute
Robert Fabricant - Frog Design Inc
Jeffrey Bardzell - Indiana University
Jen van der Meer - Drillteam
  • How do we get customers to see the larger picture, not just the immediate
  • This is some high-level, esoteric shit. Lots of people leaving. We want to see pictures!
  • People are leaving in droves and I’ve checked out. It’s a real shame but not every panel can be amazing. Time to catch up on some stuff.

Tips For Making Ideas Happen

Saturday, March 14th, 2009

Scott Belsky - Behance
web: http://www.behance.com
email: scott@behance.com

  • Attraction breeds loyalty - if it works people will keep using it instead of reinventing all the time
  • Prioritize projects visually - project leaderboards
  • Seek cross-pollination: look for ideas/people dissimilar to your groups
  • Share ideas liberally: find validation or momentum for ideas/projects;
  • Fight your way to breakthroughs
  • Don’t become burdened by consensus: Everyone wants to have their piece and to have consensus and you end up with the lowest common denominator; find a few things from each project to protect, concede on the less important things
  • Get respect (overcome the stigma of self-marketing)

Leadership

  • Leaders talk last (silence the visionary): best thing leaders can do is nothing, let other ideas get out before presenting their own
  • Reduce your amount of “insecurity work” (METRICS): don’t freak if you’re not hitting conversion goals, if Google Analytics server is down, etc
  • Value the teams immune system: don’t harsh on the “debbie downers”, let bad ideas get killed; these people can help eliminate waste and cruft
  • Seeking restraints: (gee, no worry for us)
  • Stop focusing on the visionaries: don’t focus on award winning, don’t get drunk on your Kool-aid, quit building things for yourself
  • Judge based on initiative, not experience
  • Value chemistry over people: having all the smartest people in the room doesn’t mean squat if there’s no chemistry
  • Unique is opportune: don’t shun unique until it’s successful: nothing extraordinary is achieved through ordinary means

Spying 2.0: Can America Compete With Web-Savvy Enemies?

Friday, March 13th, 2009

Amy Senger
twitter: @sengseng
web: www.1×57.com

Andrea Baker

  • Open up government information, share, try to do it in real time
  • Collaboration with other nations is crucial, no more them vs. us
  • This has turned into an argument/discussion about just how transparent government can be, should be, etc.
  • Can adversaries use the data we provide?
  • This is not yet a two way street. Gov’t Intelligence is consuming crowd-sourced data and providing results/answers (sometimes), while not really giving back to the crowd

Battery dead. Doh.

Try Making Yourself More Interesting

Friday, March 13th, 2009
DL Byron - Bike Hugger
Amit Gupta - Photojojo
Brian Oberkirch - Small Good Thing
David Rees - mnftiu.cc
Kristina Halvorson - Brain Traffic
  • DO EPIC SHIT
  • Give side projects some front & center time

Build relationships with customers in a familiar and communal way (www.getsatisfaction.com)

  • “Share. You don’t have to suck all the marrow out of the ecosystem.”
  • Experimentation/having ADHD is ok
  • How to you equate/quantify customer love into money?
  • http://www.bubblegeneration.com/ - how not to fall into the OMG recession mentality

I asked question: “#roux question: what if our customers will never be excited about our product/service (we service insurance). Is doing epic shit impossible?”

  • Talk to people like they’re human beings
  • Buck decades of “we talk like insurance people”
  • Ditch crappy overwritten content, go with a conversational voice
  • Insurance = industry of robots
  • Love = money
  • Measuring transactions = wrong. Measuring relationships = right
Is marketing dead?
  • We can no longer tell the customer what their perception of what your brand is
  • marketing is now a two-way conversation

Model this behavior. Walk the walk, talk the talk. Sit down and educate. Don’t succumb to the restraints that may be present in your organization.

Oooh, That’s Clever! (Unnatural Experiments in Web Design)

Friday, March 13th, 2009

Paul Annett - Clearleft Ltd
email: paul@clearleft.com
twitter: @nicepaul
delicious: http://del.icio.us/paulannett/sxsw09

  • Innocent fruitĀ  juice, “Stop looking at my bottom” on bottom of juice carton. Little things that make you smile. Personal touch.
  • about:mozilla easter egg

  • Flickr santa hats; Google Moon, the moon is made of cheese (zoom in all the way)
  • http://2007.dconstruct.org - nifty stylesheet switcher
  • http://kyanmedia.com (scroll all the way down, click the worm)
  • http://modernista.com
  • http://mybloodyvalentine3d.com (watch in Firefox, the content breaks out of the frame)
  • http://designedbyable.com - Very neat usage of web transparency
  • http://www.webleeddesign.com - Even better usage of transparency

Kano Model of customer satisfaction