It always amazes me when I press the genius button on my iPod and an instant play list is created which is perfect for my needs, it rarely disappoints! Is it possible that my iPod knows my music library better than I do? Absolutely it does, don’t ask me how but it is damn clever.
Surely this level of functionality is a good thing I hear you shout? Well in theory it is, but we can’t overlook the effect that this and similar functionality has in raising user expectations of all the tools and services they use.
This manifested itself most recently during a round of workshops we ran for an intranet design project. I was amazed at the technical literacy of the employees involved and it became very clear that users are no longer satisfied with the status quo. Their understanding of the ‘art of the possible’ has grown exponentially and I regularly hear users say ”just make it work like Google.”
As expectations rise our job as user experience designers gets harder but it sure is getting interesting..
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Webcredible currently has a job vacancy for a user experience consultant! We’re looking for someone to work on a variety of challenging usability, IA & design projects for household name clients.
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- Carrying out and writing up expert usability evaluations
If this sounds interesting then read about our user experience consultant job vacancy, send over your CV and you could be working here sooner than you think!
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I heard on the radio that historically England performs better when their games are broadcast on BBC television and not ITV. So it was with great relief that I settled down to watch the match on BBC Television yesterday, not just because of the risk of cutting to an advert just before the 1 goal of the match, but also with some hope we would get through to the last 16!
Perhaps it’s not surprising then, that ITV came bottom in our World Cup Websites: All to Play For report. Over the last few weeks we have analysed the World Cup-focused websites of FIFA and four major broadcasters - the BBC, Sky, ITV and Eurosport, against 10 best practice usability guidelines.
It’s been an interesting report to write as really this event could be argued to be the main predecessor to the Olympics 2012 and lessons learnt during the World Cup will be the basis of online presence in 2 years time. We think the 2010 World Cup has seen people going online en masse like no other sporting event before, just think about the multi platform user experience during London 2012.
Enough of the future and back to the present. We’re down to the last 16 and a message for ITV:
‘ITV – it’s all to play for.. but currently it’s BBC 1 and ITV 0’.
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I am obsessed with visualisations. I try to be an advocate of how they are literally worth a thousand words (or more), and should be used wisely.
People refer to them as data graphics, data visualisations, information visualisations, info graphics and etc. There are differences between these visualisations but the underlying concept of them being useful and usable shouldn’t be different.
The info graphics or visualisations that we see on websites or magazines or other media outlets are sometimes visually appealing but not that useful. I remembered evaluating a tool which helps people visualise their social networks and there was feedback on how people would print out the visualisations and stick it on the wall because it looked pretty cool although it didn’t actually make any sense.
So is there a way to design these visualisations better so that they actually help people make sense of information?
I think there is, and I’ve summarised a few very basic guidelines for designing visualisations that are easier to understand or manipulate in some instances. It’ll be interesting to hear what you think about it :)

Photo credit: munterbund.de
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