As a developer here at Doghouse I have to always keep accessibility in mind, constantly reminding myself that there is no ‘average’ user and no such thing as ‘normal’.
Ready to go Mobile? Today's Mobile Landscape: Responsive, Adaptive, Hybrid, a...Jeremy Johnson
There are a number of options when going mobile, and it's not slowing down. Why choose one over the other? What are the strengths and pitfalls? What's right for your customers and users? We'll go over each option, with examples of how you can come to the right strategy around your mobile offerings.
Early on as a Designer I had the privilege to work with some big brands, like: Verizon, Mission Foods, Nokia, and Sabre. Most of my projects were rooted in web applications. Which I loved, and was more than happy to work on as a UX Designer. But some designers took other paths, working on e-commerce sites, or perhaps lead generation. What has been hard to find recently is someone who's done both. I know I didn't know e-commerce to the degree I needed to when starting at GameStop - but learned quickly - luckily I've had some good teachers over the last couple of years.
Now talking about channels, bounce rate, A/B testing, conversion, SEM/SEO in the norm. And as I loved designing applications, I find equal interest in what makes people shop and (hopefully) eventually buy.
I recently gave this short presentation to a group of designers - a 101 on getting your interface to sell
Often, without realizing, we commit mistakes that as UX professionals we shouldn't do. This list is a reminder of what are common UX mistakes we should avoid in our process so we don't set up the time bomb on the product.
"Mantras of startups: "fail fast", "move fast and break things", "keep shipping" - these are all great slogans, but unknown to many - these are really all about learning. It's about getting things in front of your customers early, and often. Watching - and learning. Finding what ideas were not quite as brilliant as you once thought - and finding this out as fast and cheap as possible.
How are modern product teams making this happen? Where does User Experience and customer research fit in this model? Taking from Agile, Lean, and User Centered Design - this talk will go over the build-measure-learn process, and how you can start to shape your organization to move fast, without leaving your customers behind."
Failing Fast & Learning Along the Way - Big Design 2013Jeremy Johnson
Mantras of startups: "fail fast", "move fast and break things", "keep shipping" - these are all great slogans, but unknown to many - these are really all about learning. It's about getting things in front of your customers early, and often. Watching - and learning. Finding what ideas were not quite as brilliant as you once thought - and finding this out as fast and cheap as possible.
How are modern product teams making this happen? Where does User Experience and customer research fit in this model? Taking from Agile, Lean, and User Centered Design - this talk will go over the build-measure-learn process, and how you can start to shape your organization to move fast, without leaving your customers behind.
This talk was given at Big Design 2013 #bigd13
User Experience (UX) has become a buzzword in today’s tech scene. It is said to be the future, yet it is on top of the list of jobs that are impossible to explain to your parents. But what UX really is? In this session, I will share some of the most commonly known UX myths and explain why they don’t hold true. I will share case studies from my past experience, the success stories and the failures, and why organizations need to pay attention to it.
Ready to go Mobile? Today's Mobile Landscape: Responsive, Adaptive, Hybrid, a...Jeremy Johnson
There are a number of options when going mobile, and it's not slowing down. Why choose one over the other? What are the strengths and pitfalls? What's right for your customers and users? We'll go over each option, with examples of how you can come to the right strategy around your mobile offerings.
Early on as a Designer I had the privilege to work with some big brands, like: Verizon, Mission Foods, Nokia, and Sabre. Most of my projects were rooted in web applications. Which I loved, and was more than happy to work on as a UX Designer. But some designers took other paths, working on e-commerce sites, or perhaps lead generation. What has been hard to find recently is someone who's done both. I know I didn't know e-commerce to the degree I needed to when starting at GameStop - but learned quickly - luckily I've had some good teachers over the last couple of years.
Now talking about channels, bounce rate, A/B testing, conversion, SEM/SEO in the norm. And as I loved designing applications, I find equal interest in what makes people shop and (hopefully) eventually buy.
I recently gave this short presentation to a group of designers - a 101 on getting your interface to sell
Often, without realizing, we commit mistakes that as UX professionals we shouldn't do. This list is a reminder of what are common UX mistakes we should avoid in our process so we don't set up the time bomb on the product.
"Mantras of startups: "fail fast", "move fast and break things", "keep shipping" - these are all great slogans, but unknown to many - these are really all about learning. It's about getting things in front of your customers early, and often. Watching - and learning. Finding what ideas were not quite as brilliant as you once thought - and finding this out as fast and cheap as possible.
How are modern product teams making this happen? Where does User Experience and customer research fit in this model? Taking from Agile, Lean, and User Centered Design - this talk will go over the build-measure-learn process, and how you can start to shape your organization to move fast, without leaving your customers behind."
Failing Fast & Learning Along the Way - Big Design 2013Jeremy Johnson
Mantras of startups: "fail fast", "move fast and break things", "keep shipping" - these are all great slogans, but unknown to many - these are really all about learning. It's about getting things in front of your customers early, and often. Watching - and learning. Finding what ideas were not quite as brilliant as you once thought - and finding this out as fast and cheap as possible.
How are modern product teams making this happen? Where does User Experience and customer research fit in this model? Taking from Agile, Lean, and User Centered Design - this talk will go over the build-measure-learn process, and how you can start to shape your organization to move fast, without leaving your customers behind.
This talk was given at Big Design 2013 #bigd13
User Experience (UX) has become a buzzword in today’s tech scene. It is said to be the future, yet it is on top of the list of jobs that are impossible to explain to your parents. But what UX really is? In this session, I will share some of the most commonly known UX myths and explain why they don’t hold true. I will share case studies from my past experience, the success stories and the failures, and why organizations need to pay attention to it.
Experience Design Methods for Product / Service DevelopmentKetut Sulistyawati
Products and services that deliver good user experience have been shown to be more successful in the market. User experience design is a practice of transforming user insights and emotion to create products and services that are useful, easy to use, and enjoyable. The process requires in-depth understanding of the customers and inter-disciplinary collaboration to ensure connected experiences across customer touch points.
In this talk, I will discuss various User Experience Design methods that are commonly used for product and service development. I will cover the pros and cons for the methods, and how they are often tweaked in practice to meet the contextual constraints in the industry.
Presented at HFEM 2014, Kuala Lumpur Malaysia
Smashing Meets for Speed: Why web performance matters – especially nowTammy Everts
We talk a lot about web performance, but a lot of these conversations come from a purely technical perspective. Most people have a gut feeling that performance is important, but exactly what influence it has on your users and your business is often overlooked. In this talk I shared at Smashing Conference's 'Meets for Speed', I share why our need for fast online experiences is hard-wired, and how slow performance hurts your users and your business.
Performance Is About People, Not Metrics [2017 Web Directions Summit] Tammy Everts
If you want your site to succeed, you need to deliver a consistently fast user experience. But how do you quantify "fast"? And how do you track speed across millions and billions of user visits?
When we think about measuring web performance, it’s easy to fall into an abyss of metrics. TCP connection, TTFB, start render, PageSpeed and YSlow scores. Which ones should we care about? In this talk, I share my 10-year quest in search of a unicorn metric for measuring user engagement and web performance.
Making simple, elegant solutions is HARD and often invisible. These are some of the most common things I hear come out of people’s mouths when heading for a bad UX decision.
The pursuit of tapiness - A case study in making tablet friendly websitesNeil Turner
How hard can it be to make a website tablet friendly? Hang about, exactly what do you mean by tablet friendly? Are we including mini tablets? What sort of usability quirks and foibles will tablet users put up with? How can something that sounds so simple prove to be so tricky to pin down, let along achieve?
Come with me on a journey through space and time as I discuss how TUI, Europe’s largest holiday tour operator set about making Thomson.co.uk and Firstchoice.co.uk more tablet friendly. I’ll discuss why designing a great experience for tablet users is so important, what it means to optimise a website for tablet and how we went about doing it. I’ll discuss how we identified the most important improvements to make and how we’re ensuring that future designs are always tablet friendly.
Remote UX Research Videos of real people interacting with your brand, regardless of device or location.
68% Rockefeller Corporation of users give up because they think you don’t care about them.
Beware of Multi Level Lesson one
Poorly organized information • Hover tunnels = early collapsing • Inconsistent triggers
Multi Level Navs • Don’t rely on the back button • Labels help • Remember context
Links should look like Lesson two
Navigating through a site shouldn’t be a process of trial and error. Links
Links • Difficult to discern what is or is not a link • Missing click history • Inconsistent link styling in the same view
More payment options Lesson three
UX Archive
Payment options • Optimize existing checkout flows • Implement a virtual wallet • Don’t forget trust
Not all icons are Lesson four
Drag or expand? http://www.exquisitetweets.com/collection/lukew/2919
http://www.exquisitetweets.com/collection/lukew/2919
Icons • Consider context • Use tooltips • Try your designs out with real users
Consistency is one of the most powerful usability principles: when things always behave the same, users don’t have to worry about what will happen. Instead, they know what will happen based on earlier experience. ” “ Jakob Nielsen User Advocate and principal of the Nielsen Norman Group
Social security matters Lesson five So does copy!
Social privacy matters Lesson five
Social privacy • Be transparent • Make your privacy policy accessible • Look for serendipitous moments of interaction
Advertising lacks Lesson six
Consistent copy and images • Continue the conversation from ad to landing page • Keep the messages simple • Work with marketing or advertising teams
Categorization is Lesson seven
There’s no perfect way to categorize pages or products (but there’s a right way to do it). Categorization
Focus on building intuitive experiences
A mental model is what the user believes about the system at hand. ” “ Jakob Nielsen User Advocate and principal of the Nielsen Norman Group
Learn from your users • Improve mental models • Add cross-references • Solve for your primary audience(s) • Make sure your search works Categorization
Multi-level navs aren’t user friendly Mega menus and clickable menus help create a better experience for your users. Links should look like links Tried and true link conventions from the early days of the web are still the most effective ways to format your links. Consider more payment options Virtual wallet services are a great way to make checking out easier and more secure. Not all icons are universal Test users for comprehension and use tool tips to describe your most important icons.
Supercharge your application with the best UX practicesGercek Karakus
I've given this talk as a guest lecturer at Bogazici University Software Design Process graduate class (SWE530) in Spring 2015.
This talk introduces key concepts of user experience design to software engineering graduate students and outlines the process of integrating design and engineering. Starting from ideation, it goes through all the steps including but not limited to user research, sketching, prototyping, user testing, design validation and iteration.
Hand on best practices are also shared as case studies part of this presenation.
We often spend plenty of time to make a product / service, but by the time the product has been launched into the market, we realize that the product is not easy to use or does not meet the real user needs. This leads to customers getting frustrated, complaining, and even spreading bad words about the product.
Usability testing refers to the process of understanding what users do and why they do it. Usability testing involves recruiting individual test participants. They are invited to try using the product while we’re observing their behaviour. The process of watching and listening to actual users carrying out tasks with the product provides great insights into what works and what doesn't, and most importantly - WHY.
Traditional usability testing is very effective but often seen as time-consuming and expensive, therefore not many organization is willing to invest in it. We believe that everybody should be able to reap the benefits of usability testing. In this session with Akademi Berbagi, we show how usability testing can be done faster, easier, and much, much cheaper. For everyone.
Why could it be important for rug cleaning professionals to remain along with the most recent carpet set up technologies? Because it enables you to stay within the know from the types associated with floors you will be cleaning.
User Experience has a direct impact on your bottom line, and it’s about time we start telling execs in their own language. I’m sure many of you spend a good amount of time evangelizing what it is that you do, and the value it adds. Over the past 15 years I’ve introduced User Experience to everyone from CEOs to developers — using storytelling, metrics, and case studies you can prove without a doubt the value that you bring.
In this talk I’ll explain what metrics to track, how to position your work, and stories where User Experience directly effected the bottom line.
Originally given at the Big Design Conference #bigd16
UX and UI design. Differences, good practices, and useful tools in building dedicated software that meets customer needs and expectations. It covers many important aspects of UX like personas, scenarios, canvas, measuring and measuring tools, the whole development process and gathering feedback.
It was created by Dominik Goss, CEO at Inwedo
Have more questions about UX/UI? Contact us at contact@inwedo.com for additional information or questions and we will get back to you shortly.
Fail Fast, Learn Fast, Move Fast: My UX journey to move fasterJeremy Johnson
We've all heard about the Lean Startup, and now Lean UX. This is a intro into how I've been using these methods to speed up the UX process, and work better within product teams.
Why Progressive Web Apps will transform your websiteJason Grigsby
* Cut through the PWA hype and learn why they really matter
* Discover incentives from Google and Microsoft including SEO benefits
* Learn how other companies have used PWAs to increase revenue
* Put together a high-level plan on converting your website to a PWA
Presented at Portland Digital Summit 2017
Owning the Interaction in Dynamic Environmentsguestf4f7a4b38
Abstract
As the internet gets more interactive with the widespread adoption of broadband, we must continue to own user interactions across this changing landscape. This presentation will highlight the challenges from a UK design agency perspective and demonstrate my commerical, practical method for describing dynamic user interactions.
These days, everybody and their uncle has a website (which is a good thing, since it took forever for some businesses to come around on the whole digital thing).
But the problems with websites are far from over;just because everybody has one, doesn't mean they have a good one. Like the poor content pandemic, bad websites have taken the Internet by storm.
In this eBook we'll let you in on 15 key ways to improve your site, which in turn, will deliver improved conversion. I'd love to get your feedback or for my fellow developers, any other items you think should be added to this list.
or visit: http://www.thinkwsi.com/contact-us
How we could use Email as a simple but effective tool to both validate problems and potential solutions AND to understand the users we are designing for a little better in a practical sense.
Like Mobile-First, only a bit different...
Experience Design Methods for Product / Service DevelopmentKetut Sulistyawati
Products and services that deliver good user experience have been shown to be more successful in the market. User experience design is a practice of transforming user insights and emotion to create products and services that are useful, easy to use, and enjoyable. The process requires in-depth understanding of the customers and inter-disciplinary collaboration to ensure connected experiences across customer touch points.
In this talk, I will discuss various User Experience Design methods that are commonly used for product and service development. I will cover the pros and cons for the methods, and how they are often tweaked in practice to meet the contextual constraints in the industry.
Presented at HFEM 2014, Kuala Lumpur Malaysia
Smashing Meets for Speed: Why web performance matters – especially nowTammy Everts
We talk a lot about web performance, but a lot of these conversations come from a purely technical perspective. Most people have a gut feeling that performance is important, but exactly what influence it has on your users and your business is often overlooked. In this talk I shared at Smashing Conference's 'Meets for Speed', I share why our need for fast online experiences is hard-wired, and how slow performance hurts your users and your business.
Performance Is About People, Not Metrics [2017 Web Directions Summit] Tammy Everts
If you want your site to succeed, you need to deliver a consistently fast user experience. But how do you quantify "fast"? And how do you track speed across millions and billions of user visits?
When we think about measuring web performance, it’s easy to fall into an abyss of metrics. TCP connection, TTFB, start render, PageSpeed and YSlow scores. Which ones should we care about? In this talk, I share my 10-year quest in search of a unicorn metric for measuring user engagement and web performance.
Making simple, elegant solutions is HARD and often invisible. These are some of the most common things I hear come out of people’s mouths when heading for a bad UX decision.
The pursuit of tapiness - A case study in making tablet friendly websitesNeil Turner
How hard can it be to make a website tablet friendly? Hang about, exactly what do you mean by tablet friendly? Are we including mini tablets? What sort of usability quirks and foibles will tablet users put up with? How can something that sounds so simple prove to be so tricky to pin down, let along achieve?
Come with me on a journey through space and time as I discuss how TUI, Europe’s largest holiday tour operator set about making Thomson.co.uk and Firstchoice.co.uk more tablet friendly. I’ll discuss why designing a great experience for tablet users is so important, what it means to optimise a website for tablet and how we went about doing it. I’ll discuss how we identified the most important improvements to make and how we’re ensuring that future designs are always tablet friendly.
Remote UX Research Videos of real people interacting with your brand, regardless of device or location.
68% Rockefeller Corporation of users give up because they think you don’t care about them.
Beware of Multi Level Lesson one
Poorly organized information • Hover tunnels = early collapsing • Inconsistent triggers
Multi Level Navs • Don’t rely on the back button • Labels help • Remember context
Links should look like Lesson two
Navigating through a site shouldn’t be a process of trial and error. Links
Links • Difficult to discern what is or is not a link • Missing click history • Inconsistent link styling in the same view
More payment options Lesson three
UX Archive
Payment options • Optimize existing checkout flows • Implement a virtual wallet • Don’t forget trust
Not all icons are Lesson four
Drag or expand? http://www.exquisitetweets.com/collection/lukew/2919
http://www.exquisitetweets.com/collection/lukew/2919
Icons • Consider context • Use tooltips • Try your designs out with real users
Consistency is one of the most powerful usability principles: when things always behave the same, users don’t have to worry about what will happen. Instead, they know what will happen based on earlier experience. ” “ Jakob Nielsen User Advocate and principal of the Nielsen Norman Group
Social security matters Lesson five So does copy!
Social privacy matters Lesson five
Social privacy • Be transparent • Make your privacy policy accessible • Look for serendipitous moments of interaction
Advertising lacks Lesson six
Consistent copy and images • Continue the conversation from ad to landing page • Keep the messages simple • Work with marketing or advertising teams
Categorization is Lesson seven
There’s no perfect way to categorize pages or products (but there’s a right way to do it). Categorization
Focus on building intuitive experiences
A mental model is what the user believes about the system at hand. ” “ Jakob Nielsen User Advocate and principal of the Nielsen Norman Group
Learn from your users • Improve mental models • Add cross-references • Solve for your primary audience(s) • Make sure your search works Categorization
Multi-level navs aren’t user friendly Mega menus and clickable menus help create a better experience for your users. Links should look like links Tried and true link conventions from the early days of the web are still the most effective ways to format your links. Consider more payment options Virtual wallet services are a great way to make checking out easier and more secure. Not all icons are universal Test users for comprehension and use tool tips to describe your most important icons.
Supercharge your application with the best UX practicesGercek Karakus
I've given this talk as a guest lecturer at Bogazici University Software Design Process graduate class (SWE530) in Spring 2015.
This talk introduces key concepts of user experience design to software engineering graduate students and outlines the process of integrating design and engineering. Starting from ideation, it goes through all the steps including but not limited to user research, sketching, prototyping, user testing, design validation and iteration.
Hand on best practices are also shared as case studies part of this presenation.
We often spend plenty of time to make a product / service, but by the time the product has been launched into the market, we realize that the product is not easy to use or does not meet the real user needs. This leads to customers getting frustrated, complaining, and even spreading bad words about the product.
Usability testing refers to the process of understanding what users do and why they do it. Usability testing involves recruiting individual test participants. They are invited to try using the product while we’re observing their behaviour. The process of watching and listening to actual users carrying out tasks with the product provides great insights into what works and what doesn't, and most importantly - WHY.
Traditional usability testing is very effective but often seen as time-consuming and expensive, therefore not many organization is willing to invest in it. We believe that everybody should be able to reap the benefits of usability testing. In this session with Akademi Berbagi, we show how usability testing can be done faster, easier, and much, much cheaper. For everyone.
Why could it be important for rug cleaning professionals to remain along with the most recent carpet set up technologies? Because it enables you to stay within the know from the types associated with floors you will be cleaning.
User Experience has a direct impact on your bottom line, and it’s about time we start telling execs in their own language. I’m sure many of you spend a good amount of time evangelizing what it is that you do, and the value it adds. Over the past 15 years I’ve introduced User Experience to everyone from CEOs to developers — using storytelling, metrics, and case studies you can prove without a doubt the value that you bring.
In this talk I’ll explain what metrics to track, how to position your work, and stories where User Experience directly effected the bottom line.
Originally given at the Big Design Conference #bigd16
UX and UI design. Differences, good practices, and useful tools in building dedicated software that meets customer needs and expectations. It covers many important aspects of UX like personas, scenarios, canvas, measuring and measuring tools, the whole development process and gathering feedback.
It was created by Dominik Goss, CEO at Inwedo
Have more questions about UX/UI? Contact us at contact@inwedo.com for additional information or questions and we will get back to you shortly.
Fail Fast, Learn Fast, Move Fast: My UX journey to move fasterJeremy Johnson
We've all heard about the Lean Startup, and now Lean UX. This is a intro into how I've been using these methods to speed up the UX process, and work better within product teams.
Why Progressive Web Apps will transform your websiteJason Grigsby
* Cut through the PWA hype and learn why they really matter
* Discover incentives from Google and Microsoft including SEO benefits
* Learn how other companies have used PWAs to increase revenue
* Put together a high-level plan on converting your website to a PWA
Presented at Portland Digital Summit 2017
Owning the Interaction in Dynamic Environmentsguestf4f7a4b38
Abstract
As the internet gets more interactive with the widespread adoption of broadband, we must continue to own user interactions across this changing landscape. This presentation will highlight the challenges from a UK design agency perspective and demonstrate my commerical, practical method for describing dynamic user interactions.
These days, everybody and their uncle has a website (which is a good thing, since it took forever for some businesses to come around on the whole digital thing).
But the problems with websites are far from over;just because everybody has one, doesn't mean they have a good one. Like the poor content pandemic, bad websites have taken the Internet by storm.
In this eBook we'll let you in on 15 key ways to improve your site, which in turn, will deliver improved conversion. I'd love to get your feedback or for my fellow developers, any other items you think should be added to this list.
or visit: http://www.thinkwsi.com/contact-us
How we could use Email as a simple but effective tool to both validate problems and potential solutions AND to understand the users we are designing for a little better in a practical sense.
Like Mobile-First, only a bit different...
A brownbag presentation at IPC media in London about the need to use libraries to make web development much less random and more professional. Get the audio at: http://www.archive.org/details/ProfessionalWebDevelopmentWithLibraries
Usability: whats the use? Presented by We are Sigma and PRWDNexer Digital
For websites, good usability is a matter of survival. If a website is difficult to use, people leave. If the homepage fails to clearly state what a company offers and what users can do on the site, people leave. If users get lost on a website, they leave. For intranets and applications the question is one of productivity. In many organisations employees waste inordinate amounts of time searching for and assimilating the information they need to do their jobs. This lost time has a real, tangible value so ROI for designing internal systems with User Experience in mind, and spending some time testing and improving the usability of the system, is pretty compelling.
As people with a strong User Experience focus we don’t need to be convinced of the value of good usability, but for many companies who are thinking of revamping their site, intranet or portal it isn’t quite so clear cut.
Presented by Chris Bush, www.wearesigma.com and
Paul Rouke, www.prwd.co.uk
What companies need to know about web accessibility in 2020Lisandra Armas
Cuando una compañía lanza una aplicación al mercado, debe considerar la accesibilidad como un factor importante en sus aplicaciones debido a que estará dejando sin acceso a más de mil millones de personas en todo el mundo que se encuentran en situación de discapacidad; para evitarlo es esencial que desde nuestros roles en los proyectos seamos defensores del diseño y desarrollo accesible.
Alan Semenov, Development Lead at Enonic discusses progressive web aps and understanding the value from a business perspective on top of a dev perspective
Performance and User Experience for the Web of TomorrowWP Engine
Mariya Moeva, Product Manager at Google, discusses the future of the web and the important roles privacy, speed, and fostering quality user experiences have to play in it. Learn about tools like AMP, Site Kit and Web Stories for WordPress that you can use to assess and advance the performance of your WordPress site.
What is WCAG 2 and why should we care?Russ Weakley
A presentation for IAG staff for the "Future is here" event on 6 May 20202. This presentation covers three topics - "What are our legal responsibilities around accessibility?", "What is WCAG?", and "What is inclusive design?"
Do you want Software for your Business? Visit Deuglo
Deuglo has top Software Developers in India. They are experts in software development and help design and create custom Software solutions.
Deuglo follows seven steps methods for delivering their services to their customers. They called it the Software development life cycle process (SDLC).
Requirement — Collecting the Requirements is the first Phase in the SSLC process.
Feasibility Study — after completing the requirement process they move to the design phase.
Design — in this phase, they start designing the software.
Coding — when designing is completed, the developers start coding for the software.
Testing — in this phase when the coding of the software is done the testing team will start testing.
Installation — after completion of testing, the application opens to the live server and launches!
Maintenance — after completing the software development, customers start using the software.
First Steps with Globus Compute Multi-User EndpointsGlobus
In this presentation we will share our experiences around getting started with the Globus Compute multi-user endpoint. Working with the Pharmacology group at the University of Auckland, we have previously written an application using Globus Compute that can offload computationally expensive steps in the researcher's workflows, which they wish to manage from their familiar Windows environments, onto the NeSI (New Zealand eScience Infrastructure) cluster. Some of the challenges we have encountered were that each researcher had to set up and manage their own single-user globus compute endpoint and that the workloads had varying resource requirements (CPUs, memory and wall time) between different runs. We hope that the multi-user endpoint will help to address these challenges and share an update on our progress here.
Custom Healthcare Software for Managing Chronic Conditions and Remote Patient...Mind IT Systems
Healthcare providers often struggle with the complexities of chronic conditions and remote patient monitoring, as each patient requires personalized care and ongoing monitoring. Off-the-shelf solutions may not meet these diverse needs, leading to inefficiencies and gaps in care. It’s here, custom healthcare software offers a tailored solution, ensuring improved care and effectiveness.
Utilocate offers a comprehensive solution for locate ticket management by automating and streamlining the entire process. By integrating with Geospatial Information Systems (GIS), it provides accurate mapping and visualization of utility locations, enhancing decision-making and reducing the risk of errors. The system's advanced data analytics tools help identify trends, predict potential issues, and optimize resource allocation, making the locate ticket management process smarter and more efficient. Additionally, automated ticket management ensures consistency and reduces human error, while real-time notifications keep all relevant personnel informed and ready to respond promptly.
The system's ability to streamline workflows and automate ticket routing significantly reduces the time taken to process each ticket, making the process faster and more efficient. Mobile access allows field technicians to update ticket information on the go, ensuring that the latest information is always available and accelerating the locate process. Overall, Utilocate not only enhances the efficiency and accuracy of locate ticket management but also improves safety by minimizing the risk of utility damage through precise and timely locates.
Code reviews are vital for ensuring good code quality. They serve as one of our last lines of defense against bugs and subpar code reaching production.
Yet, they often turn into annoying tasks riddled with frustration, hostility, unclear feedback and lack of standards. How can we improve this crucial process?
In this session we will cover:
- The Art of Effective Code Reviews
- Streamlining the Review Process
- Elevating Reviews with Automated Tools
By the end of this presentation, you'll have the knowledge on how to organize and improve your code review proces
Essentials of Automations: The Art of Triggers and Actions in FMESafe Software
In this second installment of our Essentials of Automations webinar series, we’ll explore the landscape of triggers and actions, guiding you through the nuances of authoring and adapting workspaces for seamless automations. Gain an understanding of the full spectrum of triggers and actions available in FME, empowering you to enhance your workspaces for efficient automation.
We’ll kick things off by showcasing the most commonly used event-based triggers, introducing you to various automation workflows like manual triggers, schedules, directory watchers, and more. Plus, see how these elements play out in real scenarios.
Whether you’re tweaking your current setup or building from the ground up, this session will arm you with the tools and insights needed to transform your FME usage into a powerhouse of productivity. Join us to discover effective strategies that simplify complex processes, enhancing your productivity and transforming your data management practices with FME. Let’s turn complexity into clarity and make your workspaces work wonders!
Graspan: A Big Data System for Big Code AnalysisAftab Hussain
We built a disk-based parallel graph system, Graspan, that uses a novel edge-pair centric computation model to compute dynamic transitive closures on very large program graphs.
We implement context-sensitive pointer/alias and dataflow analyses on Graspan. An evaluation of these analyses on large codebases such as Linux shows that their Graspan implementations scale to millions of lines of code and are much simpler than their original implementations.
These analyses were used to augment the existing checkers; these augmented checkers found 132 new NULL pointer bugs and 1308 unnecessary NULL tests in Linux 4.4.0-rc5, PostgreSQL 8.3.9, and Apache httpd 2.2.18.
- Accepted in ASPLOS ‘17, Xi’an, China.
- Featured in the tutorial, Systemized Program Analyses: A Big Data Perspective on Static Analysis Scalability, ASPLOS ‘17.
- Invited for presentation at SoCal PLS ‘16.
- Invited for poster presentation at PLDI SRC ‘16.
A Study of Variable-Role-based Feature Enrichment in Neural Models of CodeAftab Hussain
Understanding variable roles in code has been found to be helpful by students
in learning programming -- could variable roles help deep neural models in
performing coding tasks? We do an exploratory study.
- These are slides of the talk given at InteNSE'23: The 1st International Workshop on Interpretability and Robustness in Neural Software Engineering, co-located with the 45th International Conference on Software Engineering, ICSE 2023, Melbourne Australia
Globus Connect Server Deep Dive - GlobusWorld 2024Globus
We explore the Globus Connect Server (GCS) architecture and experiment with advanced configuration options and use cases. This content is targeted at system administrators who are familiar with GCS and currently operate—or are planning to operate—broader deployments at their institution.
AI Genie Review: World’s First Open AI WordPress Website CreatorGoogle
AI Genie Review: World’s First Open AI WordPress Website Creator
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AI Genie Review: Key Features
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See My Other Reviews Article:
(1) TubeTrivia AI Review: https://sumonreview.com/tubetrivia-ai-review
(2) SocioWave Review: https://sumonreview.com/sociowave-review
(3) AI Partner & Profit Review: https://sumonreview.com/ai-partner-profit-review
(4) AI Ebook Suite Review: https://sumonreview.com/ai-ebook-suite-review
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Software Engineering, Software Consulting, Tech Lead, Spring Boot, Spring Cloud, Spring Core, Spring JDBC, Spring Transaction, Spring MVC, OpenShift Cloud Platform, Kafka, REST, SOAP, LLD & HLD.
OpenMetadata Community Meeting - 5th June 2024OpenMetadata
The OpenMetadata Community Meeting was held on June 5th, 2024. In this meeting, we discussed about the data quality capabilities that are integrated with the Incident Manager, providing a complete solution to handle your data observability needs. Watch the end-to-end demo of the data quality features.
* How to run your own data quality framework
* What is the performance impact of running data quality frameworks
* How to run the test cases in your own ETL pipelines
* How the Incident Manager is integrated
* Get notified with alerts when test cases fail
Watch the meeting recording here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UbNOje0kf6E
Check out the webinar slides to learn more about how XfilesPro transforms Salesforce document management by leveraging its world-class applications. For more details, please connect with sales@xfilespro.com
If you want to watch the on-demand webinar, please click here: https://www.xfilespro.com/webinars/salesforce-document-management-2-0-smarter-faster-better/
Providing Globus Services to Users of JASMIN for Environmental Data AnalysisGlobus
JASMIN is the UK’s high-performance data analysis platform for environmental science, operated by STFC on behalf of the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC). In addition to its role in hosting the CEDA Archive (NERC’s long-term repository for climate, atmospheric science & Earth observation data in the UK), JASMIN provides a collaborative platform to a community of around 2,000 scientists in the UK and beyond, providing nearly 400 environmental science projects with working space, compute resources and tools to facilitate their work. High-performance data transfer into and out of JASMIN has always been a key feature, with many scientists bringing model outputs from supercomputers elsewhere in the UK, to analyse against observational or other model data in the CEDA Archive. A growing number of JASMIN users are now realising the benefits of using the Globus service to provide reliable and efficient data movement and other tasks in this and other contexts. Further use cases involve long-distance (intercontinental) transfers to and from JASMIN, and collecting results from a mobile atmospheric radar system, pushing data to JASMIN via a lightweight Globus deployment. We provide details of how Globus fits into our current infrastructure, our experience of the recent migration to GCSv5.4, and of our interest in developing use of the wider ecosystem of Globus services for the benefit of our user community.
E-commerce Application Development Company.pdfHornet Dynamics
Your business can reach new heights with our assistance as we design solutions that are specifically appropriate for your goals and vision. Our eCommerce application solutions can digitally coordinate all retail operations processes to meet the demands of the marketplace while maintaining business continuity.
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Proudly presented by
hello@doghouse.agency
1300 321 789
Contact
Level 13
114 William Street
Melbourne, VIC 3000
Melbourne
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587 Wellington Street
Perth, WA 6000
Perth
Accessibility
Drupal and Javascript
Why developers can never forget that accessibility is a human right
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As a developer here at Doghouse I
have to always keep accessibility in
mind, constantly reminding myself
that there is no ‘average’ user and
no such thing as ‘normal’.
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Every single user has a different set
of perceptions and experiences;
which as humans we know; but as
developers we sometimes forget.
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We can’t put our users into a series
of perceived categories or
definitions just to give ourselves the
leeway to do what we think is right.
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What we need to do instead, is rely
on data and statistics to inform our
inclusive development and designs.
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It’s not just a moral and ethical
issue, it is also a legal one that has
been, in the past, both an
embarrassing and an expensive
oversight by businesses.
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We can never forget that we are
working for everyone, not the
considered majority.
Half a billion online users rely on
accessibility standards.
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We have come a long way in recent
years, but as an industry, we are not
as far along as we need to be.
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This is highlighted by the amount of
legal issues still being encountered.
In 2017, 814 web accessibility cases
proceeded in the United States.
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Closer to home in Australia, it was
the 2000 Sydney Olympics that
perhaps put web accessibility issues
on the radar of Australian
businesses; especially development
and design agencies.
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The official website of the games
was put into the accessibility
spotlight when Bruce Maguire, a
web user who accessed the web via
a refreshable braille display, found
he could not access information.
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He took legal action and won. This sparked the
subsequent adoption by the Australian
government of the W3C guidelines and
fast-tracked compliance, with the
Commonwealth Government requiring all
agency websites to meet accessibility standards
by December 1st in the same year.
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The case went a long way towards furthering
web accessibility in Australia, but not all
companies adapted fast enough or with
permanent accessibility as the goal, as
illustrated by Australian supermarket giant
Coles being taken to court for accessibility
issues in 2015.
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Perhaps even still, not all businesses are taking
enough action; in 2018 the number of legal
complaints in regard to accessibility is still on
the rise, as shown by the recent issues that focus
on the banking industry.
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With large Australian financial institutions being
called out for inaccessible websites
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Javascript, is often considered to be a part of the
reason for accessibility issues on the web, with
some considering it fraught with issues that
block accessibility.
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We work with Javascript day in and day out,
however few people would be better placed
than Everett Zufelt to deconstruct the myths
that have long surrounded Javascript and
accessibility.
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The glaucoma he was born with took his sight in
2004 and since then he has been reliant on
assistive technology. He is the technology
director at myplanet.com where he provides
support for open source technologists who work
with Drupal, and he doesn’t subscribe to the
idea that Javascript-built applications are by
nature inaccessible.
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He believes instead, that the issue is with
developers; not the language. Something that I
also believe is a valid point.
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“There is a long-held belief among developers that
any application built using JavaScript is necessarily
not accessible. This belief is reinforced by the rapid
adoption of JavaScript frameworks and UI
components that are immature, and by the corners
that get cut when time to market takes priority over
inclusivity ...But JavaScript is not to blame! As a
completely blind JavaScript developer, I can state
with some certainty that JavaScript is not to blame
…… E Zufelt
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…”But JavaScript is not to blame! As a completely
blind JavaScript developer, I can state with some
certainty that JavaScript is not to blame …… “
E Zufelt
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Javascript and accessibility are not at odds with
each other, according to Zufeit, who believes
that the issue is not in the programming
language, but in the lack of consideration by
technologists regarding how users that rely on
assistive technology are affected in any given
online situation.
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“JavaScript, as a programming language, is not to
blame for issues with accessibility. The use of
JavaScript to update a web application’s user
interface without sufficient consideration of how
this influences the experience for users of assistive
technology, is to blame.”
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“As a completely blind JavaScript developer, I can
state with some certainty that JavaScript is not to
blame. That long-held belief is, in fact, a misbelief.
There are, however, a few things you need to know
when building client-side applications with
JavaScript, to ensure that your applications are
universally accessible” - source
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In addition to considering Javascript to being
inherently inaccessible, technologists often also
assume that people who use screen readers
disable javascript.
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However, a fairly recent survey shows that this
is not accurate and 97.6% of respondents that
use screen readers do in fact have Javascript
enabled. As a developer, this was a bit of a
wake-up call.
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Oftentimes development and design teams
believe they have created accessible
applications but don’t take the time or have the
resources to test how sufficient the accessibility
really is.
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We really don’t have a good excuse for this lack
of testing, we just need to make the time and the
effort.
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These are the people best placed
to give valuable user insights and
feedback.
Real Users Include:
● People using screen readers
● Non accessibility users
● People who use keyboard
navigation
● Interested parties
Accurate Testing
Requires Real Users
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It was shown that 47% of developers admitted
to knowing only the bare minimum of ARIA-roles
and how to keep SPAs accessible, with an
additional 28% of developers confessing that
they have no idea whatsoever. - smashing
magazine
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As highlighted by Mr Zufelt
Common UX Issues
UX Issues:
● trying to sign up to a social
media site but being unable
to register
● spending time shopping
online only to find out that
he is unable to checkout
● using work required
applications but being
unable to find the buttons
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I can only imagine the levels of frustration one
would feel encountering these issues time and
time again.
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As a web developer, I am always well
intentioned in my work however I also know
that it is a continual learning process and
ongoing effort that is required to keep web
accessibility at the forefront of development and
design.
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Developers and designers can’t afford to be
complacent about it — accessibility can always
be improved, it should be a continual evolution.
15% of the population relies on us to do our job
properly.
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As a developer, the support of the Drupal
community in these areas is a huge
bonus — there is always someone willing to lend
a hand.
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It is also the reason, as Drupal developers we
don’t have an excuses for creating inaccessible
applications or designs as we have an entire
community on-hand to assist us.
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As a final note, and a positive one, Mr Zufelt
noted two companies who are getting it
absolutely right for him, as a blind
user — EXPEDIA and HILTON HOTEL.
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Source:
https://medium.com/doghouse-
agency/accessibility-drupal-and-
javascript-57cbbdf91337