I spent the weekend in bed with my favorite Kleenex with Vicks.
Completed Bubble Tea… Ready to go. (Taken with instagram)
#18 – Strategies of influence for interaction designers
Why don’t programs like Firefox and Adobe Air update on close instead of open? The initial experience that I have while opening these products sets my mind to whether or not I enjoy using them. I am happy to know that these products are continuously updating, however, when I open an application up, it is because I want to use it. I try not to use any apps that have to update on start because I find the experience so annoying.

I stumbled upon a clever website called Fivesecondtest which allows for “Simple, instant feedback on your designs.” Using the site affords users quick multiple variance tests of static page designs. What I like about this site versus Omniture Test and Target or Google Website Optimizer is users do not need to be an Analytics experts or developers to use and understand how to upload and interpret testing results. In a matter of seconds you literally feel like you can contribute to the site.
One setback of testing is that you will not be able to target specific user types with these tests. So tests should be for measuring things like strong Call To Actions (CTAs) or the most prominent focal points on a page.
Key features of the site are:
Props to Angry Monkeys for seeing a need and solving it in a smart and clean way.
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Recently, I have been researching navigation methods and I have noticed that I never use the navigation elements in LinkedIn’s top header. I have happily been using LinkedIn for over two years and have always used the left nav bar elements to navigate to my personal information or search within the search box to find specific information. I have used the search box to find: people, jobs and companies… though never for answers.
I have never pressed the “People, Jobs, Answers, Companies” links in the navigation and I am curious to know if I am alone on not using this interaction. It seems misleading to have these buttons as navigation element when, with the exception of “Answers” they do not lead a user to meaningful non-search result page. Why add more user clicks to the simple task of entering a query and searching? What if the user was still informed about the contents of the site via a tag line and the search pattern was brought back to the forefront as the main way to search for people, jobs, answers, companies and more?
Obviously, I do not have the benefit of knowing the requirements, limitations, and usability testing results that the gurus at LinkedIn are privy to, but this seems like an issue worthy of furter research and iterations.
The steps I went through:
Open Tumlblr site —> Enter 3 fields of info for new account —> Account created
What I like about this registration process is that the user is instantly able to use the Tumblr site and is not forced to retrieve an email or view a tutorial in order to start blogging. The introductory information is presented in a clear and concise way, and it is designed so that I can get to work right away instead of learning special site specific coding or “UI trickery”. I also like the fact that the icons are labeled. I believe in labeling icons or using labels alone unless the icons are obvious and/or known user patterns. This site is very UX and aesthetically pleasing to me.