This document discusses using sensors to create adaptive experiences. It describes how sensors can turn data into contextual knowledge by recognizing when a user is at home, work or in a car. It provides examples of many different types of sensors like accelerometers, cameras, microphones that can be used. The document envisions how lighting could intuitively adjust based on time of day and user behavior using integrated sensors. It promotes designing experiences that are friction-free by understanding what users want, when they need it based on their immediate context through adaptive design and sensors.
SAVE 70% OF YOUR ELECTRICITY BILLS. When it comes to saving money, Savyt light motion sensor is one way through which you cannot only save electricity costs but can also extend the life of your light bulbs.
Designing with Sensors: Creating Adaptive ExperiencesAvi Itzkovitch
How do we utilize sensor and user data to create experiences in the digital world? We all know that smart devices have sensors, but how can we use this as a resource to acquire information about the user and his environment? And how can we use this information to design a better user experience that is both unobtrusive and transparent? The simple answer: we create adaptive systems.
Join speaker Avi Itzkovitch to discover core concepts for utilizing smart device technologies and sensor data in order to understand context, and add “adaptive thinking” to the UX professional’s toolset when designing experiences. In his presentation, Avi will demonstrate the importance of understanding context when designing adaptive experiences, give ideas on how to design adaptive systems, and most important, inspire designers to think how smart devices and context-aware applications can enhance the user experience with adaptivity.
A sensor is a machine that detects and reacts to some kind of input from the objective environment. The precise input might be light, heat, motion, moisture, pressure, or any one of a huge number of additional environmental occurrences. The output is usually a signal that is transformed to human-readable exhibit at the sensor site or broadcasted electronically above a network for evaluation or further dispensation.
A brief introduction to Sensor-Framework on Android.
Introduction to sensor hardware:
- Accelerometer
- Gyroscope
- Compass
- Light/proximity sensor
Control & Data-flow from the
h/w <--> Kernel <--> Userspace.
How-To:
Harness the power of sensors in your Android-application.
Provide uniform UX across multiple devices when developing sensor-based Apps.
Implement Sensor-fusion in your Android-app.
Reduce power consumption of sensors h/w.
SAVE 70% OF YOUR ELECTRICITY BILLS. When it comes to saving money, Savyt light motion sensor is one way through which you cannot only save electricity costs but can also extend the life of your light bulbs.
Designing with Sensors: Creating Adaptive ExperiencesAvi Itzkovitch
How do we utilize sensor and user data to create experiences in the digital world? We all know that smart devices have sensors, but how can we use this as a resource to acquire information about the user and his environment? And how can we use this information to design a better user experience that is both unobtrusive and transparent? The simple answer: we create adaptive systems.
Join speaker Avi Itzkovitch to discover core concepts for utilizing smart device technologies and sensor data in order to understand context, and add “adaptive thinking” to the UX professional’s toolset when designing experiences. In his presentation, Avi will demonstrate the importance of understanding context when designing adaptive experiences, give ideas on how to design adaptive systems, and most important, inspire designers to think how smart devices and context-aware applications can enhance the user experience with adaptivity.
A sensor is a machine that detects and reacts to some kind of input from the objective environment. The precise input might be light, heat, motion, moisture, pressure, or any one of a huge number of additional environmental occurrences. The output is usually a signal that is transformed to human-readable exhibit at the sensor site or broadcasted electronically above a network for evaluation or further dispensation.
A brief introduction to Sensor-Framework on Android.
Introduction to sensor hardware:
- Accelerometer
- Gyroscope
- Compass
- Light/proximity sensor
Control & Data-flow from the
h/w <--> Kernel <--> Userspace.
How-To:
Harness the power of sensors in your Android-application.
Provide uniform UX across multiple devices when developing sensor-based Apps.
Implement Sensor-fusion in your Android-app.
Reduce power consumption of sensors h/w.
Use of internal sensors of tablets and smarphones in physics #scichallenge2017Matouš Pikous
In my project I tried to find how tablets and smartphones can be used in physics lessons and then how many advantages they can bring. I focused on two of the internal sensors measuring quantities. I described those two sensors to details and I figured out two experiments which could be practised at school lessons. The first sensor is an accelerometer, which is a common sensor in most portable devices and which can be used in many different ways. The second sensor is magnetic field sensor because students do not know it but it can be useful in physics lessons. #scichallenge2017
Margaret Gould Stewart – Elegant Tools: The 4 principles of business designinUse
Margaret Gould Stewarts presentation at From Business to Buttons in Stockholm, April 15 2016. FBTB is the meeting place for everyone who wants hands-on advice on how to generate business value by creating great user experiences: www.fbtb.se
Simon Bennetts presentation at From Business to Buttons in Stockholm, April 15 2016. FBTB is the meeting place for everyone who wants hands-on advice on how to generate business value by creating great user experiences.
Kjell Persson – Transforming a City: Re-designing DenverinUse
Kjell Perssons presentation at From Business to Buttons in Stockholm, April 15 2016. FBTB is the meeting place for everyone who wants hands-on advice on how to generate business value by creating great user experiences.
Golden Krishna – The Best Interface is No InterfaceinUse
Golden Krishnas presentation at From Business to Buttons in Stockholm, April 15 2016. FBTB is the meeting place for everyone who wants hands-on advice on how to generate business value by creating great user experiences.
Jeffrey Veens presentation at From Business to Buttons in Stockholm, April 15 2016. FBTB is the meeting place for everyone who wants hands-on advice on how to generate business value by creating great user experiences.
Susan Weinschenk – Robots, VR, and AI: The Future of Human Interaction with T...inUse
Susan Weinschenks presentation at From Business to Buttons in Stockholm, April 15 2016. FBTB is the meeting place for everyone who wants hands-on advice on how to generate business value by creating great user experiences.
Abby Coverts presentation at From Business to Buttons in Stockholm, April 15 2016. FBTB is the meeting place for everyone who wants hands-on advice on how to generate business value by creating great user experiences.
Att bygga rätt lösning är en stor utmaning. Den som skapar värde, gör vardagen enklare och som förändrar beteenden. 5 tips till utvecklare som vill påverka!
Inspirationsföreläsning om attityder och förhållningssätt som främjar kreativitet.
David de Léon är UX director på inUse. Han har tio års erfarenhet av att designa för mobiler och att leda andra i kreativt arbete.
Presentationen går igenom 12 principer (text fins i noterna till presentationen):
Töm hjärnan på skräp
Parkera alla måsten
Jobba med vilket problem du vill lösa
Skapa psykologisk avstånd till problemet
Utgå från att lösningen finns
Ge dig själv tillstånd att leka
Jobba med det du får
Lär dig älska dåliga idéer
Gör det som är obekvämt
Bädda för oförutsedda möjligheter
Använd dig av begränsningar
Sov på saken
Workshop at Agile by Example 14 in Warszaw. Well-functioning Scrum teams have proved to be good at delivering working
software, but that does not necessarily mean that they deliver optimal, or even
expected, business value. Agile is becoming the standard way of developing
software, and the understanding of the value of User Experience (UX) is
increasing. Impact Management and Impact Mapping ensures value creation by focusing on desired values for users and busines
29. Time and Date
“Songza is a simple answer to a tough question: what should I listen to right now
30.
31. Alba has embedded sensors that allow it to intelligently respond to the surrounding
world.
Perfect Light Level
With integrated sensors,
Alba is always able to
maintain perfect lighting
levels without wasting any
light
Color Temperature
Alba seamlessly adjusts
from cool whites to warm-
yellow tones to suit the
situation
Motion Sensing
On when you’re there, off
when you’re not – never
worry about touching a
switch again
Intuitive Learning
Our system works straight
out of the box and learns
from your inputs
32. 6am
Syncs with your alarm to gently wake you up
naturally, like the sunrise. The right light tobget you
going.
33. 1pm
When everyone is out to lunch, Alba turns off the lights automatically.
Color temperature can be optimized for productivity.
34. 6pm
Alba helps set the right lighting so you can better enjoy family
time.
35. Midnight
Alba will gently light your way at night. Just enough to find your way
while letting everyone else sleep.
As futuristic as it seems, this movie is missing one key component, what we know today is a complete fact that was unimaginable 13 years ago when this movie was released. The fact is that even today you don't need a retina scan to identify person
Minority Report (2002)
In essence adaptive design was always here
Minority Report (2002)
Here is an instructive case where adaptive thinking was used to create a mobile application for a bike sharing program. Bicycle sharing systems, also known as bike rental, are becoming more and more common in major cities around the world. Bicycle sharing helps reduce traffic congestion and air pollution, and encourages local residents to maintain a healthy lifestyle.
A user who wants to rent a bike can use a mobile application to look for the nearest bike rental station that has bikes available to rent. If the user is unfamiliar with the city, they can use the application to get directions to the rental station; this is the core functionality of the application.
An adaptive system will realize when the user has arrived at the bike rental station and automatically offer additional options, i.e., adapt to the current situation. For example, it may offer the user a quick way to rent a bike, a feature that was not available in the application before arriving at the rental station. During the rental period, the system will anticipate the user’s needs and offer nearby bike rental stations with available parking spots where the bike can be returned, and show the user the current balance for the rental time.