Posts Tagged ‘Design’

Verdana_Arial
A minor victory at work had made me a happy designer. During a demo run, I noticed the newly implemented feature still appeared in Verdana. Many moons again a request was made to have Verdana replaced with Arial. The engineer assured the font couldn’t be Verdana because the code is new. She said the smaller font size might have me mistaken it to be a different font.

I was not convinced. But I didn’t continue this discussion so we can proceed with the demo. After all the sprint tasks were demonstrated, we returned to the same screen. I brought up the font issue again. I half jokingly asked the engineers to humor me by proofing me wrong. I’ll shut up when I see the code is indeed Arial.

Engineers were happy to take on that challenge. We went back to their desk and started checking the code. There were hundreds of inline CSS to go through and it was hard to pinpoint to the right one. One of the engineers suggested nesting the font style in the top-level code then run the program again. As I have suspected, the font used was not Arial. The engineers finally agreed.

Couple of us designers attended tonight’s Puget Sound SIGCHI event hosted by Google at its Fremont office. The location wasn’t new to Tab and I. 4 years ago, we both worked for the same design firm. The firm’s office was the very location Google’s at now.

This was my 2nd time attended UX event hosted by Google. From past experience, I knew the meeting room is going to be a mad house. We arrived early enough this time to score ourselves a decent spot. There was even time for a quick tour to Googl’e usability lab and eye tracking device.

The speaker tonight was Jake Knapp, UI designer at Google. Jake shared his typical day at work and how things got done in this fast pace and engineer-driven culture.

His talking points were pretty straight forward, and were already adapted by companies practicing Agile Development Manifesto. One tip particularly got me interested was the importance of presentation to UX professionals.

How design concept is conveyed to the entire team and generate great feedback relied heavily on designers’ ability to give good presentation. Just like any design project, presentation should have a goal, start from paper and sketches, and plan out a storyboard that’ll help to get your point crossed.

A list of rule of thumbs:

  • Follow the 3-word rule: 3 bullets and enough said
  • 10/20/30 rule by Guy Kawasaki: 10 slides, 20 minutes, and make sure use 30 pt fonts for your slides
  • Be careful presenting mock-ups. Drawing is a better alternative, as the focus will not be on the design details. Also drawing invites people to participate.

Jake’s talk ended with resources on tonight’s topic:

my yahoo screenshot

Running into Yahoo’s personalize travel site was entirely an accident. I was goggling for some travel information. One of the links led me to Yahoo’s travel destination page. The information was somewhat useful. But things started to get interesting when I noticed an “Add to Trip” feature by the destination info.

Since I’m collecting information on several locations, and I would like to compare them under one common area. I started adding photos and information I came across. Before I knew it, I’ve compiled a list of destinations. They were also pinpointed on a map view. And later when I did a search on airline prices and saved one of the better deals, it too showed up in My Trip.

My travel plan was putting together all by itself without me realizing it!

Knowing my travel plan started to take shape, I was ready to invest more time into this unknown territory. I tracked down MyTravel page under Yahoo! Travel. Other than the recently put together My Trip Plan, the page itself was, naturally, not one bit personalized. Big yellow sticky were playfully placed on sections of the page, providing hints and focal points of areas I can get started.

Personalizing these pages was hardly any hard work. So more time was invested. Then I found out connecting My Travel with my flickr account, my past travel photos will show up oh my travel pages without having to upload them.

Pretty sweet setup for travelers alike, my only complain about My Travel so far is it’s sharing amongst friends and family was overlooked.

080211_guineapig.jpg

Lately I’ve being using blaringSmelly as a guinea pig to test out WordPress themes and getting familiar with new features from its recent version upgrades.

The reason is simple, i want to redesign my website. And I want to use WordPress as my admin tool.

In the past, I update my website only when I was out looking for job. This time I actually have a different agenda. My website redesign will leverage design methodologies I’ve observed over the years.

The scope of redesign is more than those meet the eyes. Currently I’m in planning and research phrase. The redesign project will put my understanding of design process, principles of information architecture, and user-centered design in good uses.

And that, is why blaringsmelly has being changing appearances more frequent than [insert celebrity’s name here].

uw campus

Friday morning, little pass 10:30am. Quickly I finished replying work emails and walked through some tasks with our intern. Then like a gust of wind, I ran off to the bus tunnel to catch the 73 express. My destination: University of Washington campus.

Not until I was in the bus speeding on I-5 northbound, I realized it has being exactly 10 years since I last ended my school life.

I didn’t expect I’d go back to school. For years, I believed the real learning came from working in the field. I stand correctly. But overtimes, new attitudes and methodologies are merging and shaping the world of web based design. The more I exposed myself to the new design principles, the more I felt that acquiring such knowledge through job force were limiting and difficult to come by. Everybody is talking about it, but nobody has the absolute answers.

So I applied to the User-Centered Design certification program in University of Washington, going back to the good old academic learning. To make sure I can handle school and work at the same time, I took only 1 weekly course this quarter. The course, “Seminar in Technical Communication”, will invite speakers from various technology fields to talk about their experiences in applying user-centered design process to actual software development.

After the lecture, I took advantage of the nice weather and walked my way out of the campus. I’m enjoying every bit of this is because this is so out of what I’m accustomed to between working and being a home buddy.