Fwends Logo
AboutA ManifestoArticlesLet's be fwendsSearchLink to LinkedIn ProfileLink to Twitter AccountLink to Mastodon Account
Imprint
Fwends Logo
To the List Archive

Valuable Experience Design Tools and Resources

Get a bunch of links into your inbox every other week.

Let's be Fwends is a journal about agility, organisations, technology, and the larger media landscape. And most importantly the role of all of us in all of that.

Let's be Fwends is sent via MailChimp, an email markting platform. By clicking 'join now!' to submit this form, you acknowledge that the information you provide will be transferred to MailChimp for processing in accordance with their Privacy Policy and Terms.

Here are four thinking tools and resources that will teach you about experience design - even if you're not an experience designer.
It's not as easy as you thought it would be.
View this email in your browser
LET'S BE FWENDS ISSUE #51:

VALUABLE EXPERIENCE DESIGN TOOLS AND RESOURCES

“You never change things by fighting the existing reality.
To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.” 
~ Buckminster Fuller
I guess when Facebook starts it’s own cryptocurrency, it’s all over and we’ve reached peak weirdness. So I can finally go back and write about experience design and link to cool resources and tools and stuff.


The Product Experience Playbook

The fine people over at Automattic Design (responsible for wordpress.com, among other things) published their Product Experience Playbook, and although I am aware of the fact that you probably don’t need another compendium of best practices and good advice, I must say it is a very interesting read. I’m especially a big fan of their “teamwork” section. It’s the first time (that I’m aware of) that a design handbook includes not only designer-client/designer-user interaction and collaboration, but also addresses the principles of interaction inside the team itself.


On mental and conceptual Modes

Here’s an interesting primer on the difference between mental and conceptual models, and how it influences digital product development (but also, how you should treat your research).

Alana offers advice on how to align your users mental models with your conceptual models, based on wether you want to introduce a completely new product (or product category) or improve on already existing solutions.


Where the Hamburger Menu comes from

OK, I can’t do it without at least one interesting background article — You’re aware of the “hamburger menu”, of course. Maybe you don’t know it by its name, but you have seen the three horizontal lines stacked on top on each other a gazillion times.
Hamburger Menus made their big appearance when responsive design really kicked in - it was a convenient way to hide away navigation bars without changing the structure of the website. Screen estate on mobile was extremely limited, and people wanted to move away as much as possible from the screen.

But did you know that the Hamburger Menu is actually much older? Like, really, much older? Like, 1981-like old?

Dale interviewed the people involved in creating the user interface of the Xerox Star, and dives right into the early days of icon design.


Want to try something else? Let's talk about Sausage Links!

Depending on your use case, a hamburger menu might not be the most user friendly way of navigating around.
Here’s an interesting alternative, which seems to be based loosely on the “quick reply” buttons of Facebook Messenger.
If you’re trying this kind of navigation, just make sure you style the buttons right. Because text buttons can also be a usability problem.


I'm in Munich next Week

I'm in Munich on 25.6. speaking at the TDWI Conference about Agile, making mistakes, learning from them, and what happens when you take advice from an iconic fashion designer.

Hit me up if you're there and want to go for a coffee!


A Polar Bear and a severe case of the Munchies

But of course, Let’s be Fwends wouldn’t be itself if there wasn’t at least one totally offtopic and at least slightly bonkers link, so here’s a video of a polar bear trying to eat a scotsman.

Holy cow, look at those incisors!


The closest thing to getting eaten by a polar bear that ever happened to me was when my cat was so hungry, he shoved me aside to get to his food, making me nearly trip and fall over.
If you too are the survivor of a brutal animal attack, high fives to you, and welcome to the club. 🐾
 
Enjoy what you see? Please recommend this newsletter to someone who might enjoy it equally. Thanks!
Send a tweet to your friends over at twitter.
Share on LinkedIn
View this issue of Let's be Fwends in your browser
Copyright © 2019 fwends, All rights reserved.


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp

Let's be Fwends is sent via MailChimp, an email markting platform. By clicking 'join now!' to submit this form, you acknowledge that the information you provide will be transferred to MailChimp for processing in accordance with their Privacy Policy and Terms.