The document discusses how to make a SharePoint site intuitive by defining three things: the user, the task, and metrics for measuring success. It covers usability best practices like minimizing cognitive load on users and leveraging users' expectations by following design patterns and conventions. Visual design is important for communicating the site's purpose and guiding users through their tasks. Defining specific success metrics up front helps ensure a site is truly easy to use.
"Creating user-centered websites that drive results" by Savage at the HiMA IS...Robin Tooms
We all know that designing successful websites requires an understanding of how users consume and interact with information online, but taking the first steps toward a user-centric approach requires a process that will uncover the user’s needs and balance them against the site’s goals.
This presentation covers the methods and tools of observation and creation that help:
- Improve usability to generate the right actions
- Increase user engagement with your content and layouts
- Make sense of user data to find solutions
Lecture 6 from the COMP 4010 course on Virtual Reality. This lecture describes some typical VR applications. The lecture was taught on August 31st 2017 by Bruce Thomas at the University of South Australia. Slides were made by Mark Billinghurst
Introduction to building and using personas and scenarios in designPenny Hagen
Introduction to building and using Personas and Scenarios in Design given to UTS first year design students.
An overview of how they are created, and how they are useful in the design process, including getting from user research to design, and how they inform design.
In which we look at the mysteries of moving from boxes and arrows to a real actual interface. It starts with sketching, goes through basic models of interaction on a screen, and finishes with wireframes.
Slides for my Open Badges Design Workshop held on 21 March 2014. Organized by the INSIGNIA project at Australian National University, led by Dr Inger Mewburn.
Copy of slide deck presented at the AAM MuseumExpo on Monday, April 27 at the Technology Innovation Stage
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts (MIA) has created an open source toolset for crafting and sharing engaging digital stories. “Griot”, a West African term for wise story-teller. The interpretive software is in use at the MIA, branded as ArtStories: http://artstories.artsmia.org ArtStories are available on tablet devices provided in the galleries, and for those using their own devices. The tools includes authoring content, presenting stories, and tiling & annotating images to enhance zooming, panning, and highlighting details.
This session will describe the development of the tools, demonstrate the software in action, discuss the results of a formal audience evaluation, and its impact on museum visitors.
This is a lecture I gave to my User Experience class at General Assembly on Interaction Design. It covers a brief history, and the various approaches that are being used.
I borrowed from other sources to a degree, which I have cited extensively.
A presentation given at the UX Futures Group. The goal was to expand on a popular meme decrying the tendency to reduce User Experience design to User Interface design and UI engineering.
Why use Google Docs? Because they facilitate learning and are available anytime with an internet connection- no software required. Google docs save automatically and teachers can see work and offer suggestions in real time.
Best Practices Guide: Introducing Web Application Firewallsalexmeisel
Web applications of all kinds, whether online shops or partner portals, have in recent years increasingly become the target of hacker attacks. The attackers are using methods which are specifically aimed at exploiting potential weak spots in the web application software itself – and this is why they are not detected, or are not detected with sufficient accuracy, by traditional IT security systems such as network firewalls or IDS/IPS systems. OWASP develops tools and best practices to
support developers, project managers and security testers in the development and operation of secure
web applications. Additional protection against attacks, in particular for already productive web applications, is offered by what is still a emerging category of IT security systems, known as Web Application Firewalls (hereinafter referred to simply as WAF), often also called Web Application Shields or Web Application Security Filters.
Building & Maintaining A Living Style Guide for a Post Apocalyptic Webmjovel
We have moved beyond the world of creating pages and into a world where we focus on creating design systems composed of a combination of design aesthetics, ui components, and code standards. In order to communicate these design systems across teams of designers and developers, these design systems are often captured in a living style guide. In this session, we explored how to build and sustain a living style guide. Presented at GiantConf 2016 in Charlotte, NC.
"Creating user-centered websites that drive results" by Savage at the HiMA IS...Robin Tooms
We all know that designing successful websites requires an understanding of how users consume and interact with information online, but taking the first steps toward a user-centric approach requires a process that will uncover the user’s needs and balance them against the site’s goals.
This presentation covers the methods and tools of observation and creation that help:
- Improve usability to generate the right actions
- Increase user engagement with your content and layouts
- Make sense of user data to find solutions
Lecture 6 from the COMP 4010 course on Virtual Reality. This lecture describes some typical VR applications. The lecture was taught on August 31st 2017 by Bruce Thomas at the University of South Australia. Slides were made by Mark Billinghurst
Introduction to building and using personas and scenarios in designPenny Hagen
Introduction to building and using Personas and Scenarios in Design given to UTS first year design students.
An overview of how they are created, and how they are useful in the design process, including getting from user research to design, and how they inform design.
In which we look at the mysteries of moving from boxes and arrows to a real actual interface. It starts with sketching, goes through basic models of interaction on a screen, and finishes with wireframes.
Slides for my Open Badges Design Workshop held on 21 March 2014. Organized by the INSIGNIA project at Australian National University, led by Dr Inger Mewburn.
Copy of slide deck presented at the AAM MuseumExpo on Monday, April 27 at the Technology Innovation Stage
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts (MIA) has created an open source toolset for crafting and sharing engaging digital stories. “Griot”, a West African term for wise story-teller. The interpretive software is in use at the MIA, branded as ArtStories: http://artstories.artsmia.org ArtStories are available on tablet devices provided in the galleries, and for those using their own devices. The tools includes authoring content, presenting stories, and tiling & annotating images to enhance zooming, panning, and highlighting details.
This session will describe the development of the tools, demonstrate the software in action, discuss the results of a formal audience evaluation, and its impact on museum visitors.
This is a lecture I gave to my User Experience class at General Assembly on Interaction Design. It covers a brief history, and the various approaches that are being used.
I borrowed from other sources to a degree, which I have cited extensively.
A presentation given at the UX Futures Group. The goal was to expand on a popular meme decrying the tendency to reduce User Experience design to User Interface design and UI engineering.
Why use Google Docs? Because they facilitate learning and are available anytime with an internet connection- no software required. Google docs save automatically and teachers can see work and offer suggestions in real time.
Best Practices Guide: Introducing Web Application Firewallsalexmeisel
Web applications of all kinds, whether online shops or partner portals, have in recent years increasingly become the target of hacker attacks. The attackers are using methods which are specifically aimed at exploiting potential weak spots in the web application software itself – and this is why they are not detected, or are not detected with sufficient accuracy, by traditional IT security systems such as network firewalls or IDS/IPS systems. OWASP develops tools and best practices to
support developers, project managers and security testers in the development and operation of secure
web applications. Additional protection against attacks, in particular for already productive web applications, is offered by what is still a emerging category of IT security systems, known as Web Application Firewalls (hereinafter referred to simply as WAF), often also called Web Application Shields or Web Application Security Filters.
Building & Maintaining A Living Style Guide for a Post Apocalyptic Webmjovel
We have moved beyond the world of creating pages and into a world where we focus on creating design systems composed of a combination of design aesthetics, ui components, and code standards. In order to communicate these design systems across teams of designers and developers, these design systems are often captured in a living style guide. In this session, we explored how to build and sustain a living style guide. Presented at GiantConf 2016 in Charlotte, NC.
Enterprise Collaboration and Employee Engagement with Microsoft SharePoint My...rwuhrman
Shocked this got 100k views. Thank you for the love. I presented this deck on driving Employee Engagement using the personalization capabilities of MySite to a SharePoint user group in 2007. It's an overview on how to use Microsoft SharePoint MySites.
What's new in SharePoint 2016 for IT Professionals Webinar with CrowCanyonVlad Catrinescu
Start the New Year off right! Join Vlad Catrinescu, Microsoft MVP and president of vNext Solutions, as he helps you prepare for the coming release of SharePoint 2016. This latest version of SharePoint comes with a plethora of new features and promises greater stability and true hybrid readiness. As an IT Professional, you need to know what SharePoint 2016 has in it and how it will impact your SharePoint implementation.
In this webinar, Vlad will show you the new features and changes in 2016, covering such topic as:
• Depreciated Features
• New Topologies with MinRole
• User Profile + Microsoft Identity Manager / AD Import
• Cloud Search Service Application
• Zero Downtime Patching
• Upgrading to SharePoint 2016
10 Best SharePoint Features You’ve Never Used (But Should)Christian Buckley
A walk through of the advances made in the SharePoint 2010 platform from earlier versions, as well as a list of 10 out of the box features that most end users are not using, but should. From a webinar given on 6-5-2012
Don't Suck at SharePoint - Avoid the common mistakesBenjamin Niaulin
Recording: http://bit.ly/SeyVK8
How do you avoid the most common mistakes when using SharePoint, if you've never used it before?
What makes SharePoint so popular is also its worse enemy, it's easy to use. As a platform, it allows you to build whatever you want to help the organization. But for it to be successful, you need to avoid the common mistakes made.
As a consultant, I have unfortunately had a lot of experience seeing or even doing some of the things in SharePoint that lead to utter chaos or disaster. That's why I would like to share them with you this time, show you how to not suck at SharePoint.
In this webinar we'll discuss:
-A brief overview of SharePoint as a platform
-Common scenarios SharePoint is used for
-Things that have miserably failed
-Bad architecture
-Solutions and Best Practices when starting
The long awaited SharePoint 2016 is finally coming! As Microsoft is expected to release in the Spring of 2016, Benjamin Niaulin, Office Servers & Services MVP at Sharegate, gives us the grand tour of the new SharePoint features!
Julie Grundy gives an overview of user experience Design, why it's important, guiding principles, UX research overview, and tactics used by UX professionals. November 2015.
What Makes SharePoint UX Good?What is UX?
What defines good UX?
Evaluation Criteria for SharePoint UX
Key Tips from the Field
The Future of SharePoint & Office 365 UXUX is the short for User Experience
UX is the experience that the user has while interacting with your X
It’s more about how the user feels when they use your X
Many different parts compose the UX, no “one things” makes it
UX is NOT the interface or design of your X
UI is short for User Interface
It’s what you see in the browser
Help messages, buttons, modals, characters, style, menus, navigation, pages
UI is an incredibly important part of UX
In my presentation we will talk about what is User Experience (UX) and why it is important nowadays.
Also we will briefly talk about Usability of a product and how to contact some easy Usability tests.
Finally we will learn the 10 Heuristics of Nielsen and revers-engineer our way back to designing thoughtful User Interfaces (UI) based on those rules of thumb.
Disclaimer: I am not a UX researcher or expert! I am a UX enthusiast. I am trying to study and learn as much as I can about UX (workshop, seminars, uni classes, articles etc.) and all I am trying to de here is to make people understand the importance of it, through what I have learned so far.
Slides Ian Multon recently used in his discussion w/ mentees of The Product Mentor.
The Product Mentor is a program designed to pair Product Mentors and Mentees from around the World, across all industries, from start-up to enterprise, guided by the fundamental goals…Better Decisions. Better Products. Better Product People.
Throughout the program, each mentor leads a conversation in an area of their expertise that is live streamed and available to both mentee and the broader product community.
http://TheProductMentor.com
Basic introduction to (mainly Nielsen) usability principles for a non UX audience. Content oriented with examples of success stories (both public sector complex sites) and their impact on objectives.
In this session, we will explore the how the recent explosion of devices has disrupted the process of designing a website that we've crafted over the past decade.
When designers only have one instance of website (i.e., desktop) to design, the layout is uniform. The header, content area, sidebar, and footer all remain static. Furthermore, the elements are relatively uniform as well. Buttons, navigation, typography, and images are all basically the same across across the various pages. But if you are designing a responsive website – one whose look and feel adapts depending whether you're using a phone, laptop, or tablet – then these elements and especially the layout begin to diverge.
After this session, you should leave with the confidence to argue the importance of responsive design to your client or boss – and that the with the proper strategy, the extra effort and costs can be justified (and hopefully minimized).
Building a Solid Foundation: Usability & Information Architecture WIAD Tampa ...Karen Bachmann
Usability testing involves seeing your designs in action. When it comes to testing Information Architecture, evaluation needs to take place early in the project to ensure that the foundation is solid, scaleable and useful to the intended audience. In this session you'll learn what testing approaches support Information Architecture design and learn about pragmatic tools to ensure your IA can support a great and satisfying user experience.
What is User Experience Design?
The Business Case for User Experience Design
What are the UX processes?
How can we measure its effectiveness?
Who needs to be involved?
Website Usability - Direct Marketing Association NorCal 042016John Thyfault
Web Usability:
Maximizing the Visitors to Your Site
Once you’ve driven the traffic to your site, are you maximizing the value of the visitors? Too many sites have been developed over the years without a good, clear plan that leads visitors to what they are looking for.
What you’ll learn:
Understand what you want your site to accomplish and how the user’s interaction with the site is tied into this
Understand how your content informs your site design
How you should optimize your site for mobile
Setting up a testing and optimization program
Finding the right tools to aid in the testing
Understand the advantages and challenges of user panels, eye tracking and interaction tracking
How to improve your site usability on a low budget
Instructor: John Thyfault
UXD - A quick overview on what you need to work with your UX team Guilherme Rodrigues
The UXD team came up with a presentation, covering some of the point we have in our day to day work. Information architects, designers and front-end participated to build up this doc in order to practice and be more familiar with UCD process, agile project management, UX research and so on.
Have a look on the presentation and help us to build it up.
Lecture on Advanced Human Computer Interaction given by Mark Billinghurst on July 28th 2016. This is the first lecture in the COMP 4026 Advanced HCI course.
User Experience Design Fundamentals - Part 2: Talking with UsersLaura B
#2 in a 3-part series on UX Fundamentals: Talking with Users
Understand why you should talk to users to uncover, validate and/or understand their goals.
Learn how and when to talk with your users:
User research methods
Planning
Best practices for interviews
A bluffer's guide to IA and content strategyNeil Allison
This presentation was delivered to the Edinburgh Open Source Breakfast Meet Up group on 1 August 2014.
It's a quick run through what information architecture and content strategy are, drawing on quotes and resources from experts in the field.
My main point, however, is that user focus is what really matters. I show how the disciplines relate to other areas such as UX, usability and interaction design.
I also make the point that most customers (in this case, people wanting a website or app) don't care about such things. They care about revenue, cutting costs, satisfying customers and mitigating risk.
So I end with a couple of points I think are fundamental to get across to customers and suggest ways in which you can engage and collaborate.
Similar to Designing Intuitive SharePoint Sites: The Science of "Easy to Use" (20)
Know Thy User: The Missing Element in SharePoint Solutions (User Centered Des...Marcy Kellar
You want the most out of your investment in SharePoint – a highly adopted, effective and easy-to-use solution. Achieving these objectives requires more than technical skills and knowledge of the inner-workings of SharePoint features – it requires an understanding of user problems and goals as well as a process that keeps the user at the center of the lifecycle. If you are like many organizations implementing SharePoint, you are using “surrogates” to represent user requirements, collecting inadequate user information and not engaging users later in the design and development process. If this sounds familiar, you may be headed toward a costly redesign.
This session defines both User Centered Design (UCD) and User Experience (UX) concepts and provides tangible methods that incorporate users into your process without compromising business goals.
10 Worst Mistakes in SharePoint BrandingMarcy Kellar
Earlier this year I wrote a blog on the Top 10 Mistakes in SharePoint 2010 Branding and UI Design (http://bit.ly/ITzlJl) and had such an overwhelming response that I wanted to present it to the community. I brought in a front end developer (Tom Daly) and a Developer (Mike Mukalian) to help me convey the different perpsectives that each of our roles takes. My original list of mistakes changed a bit when we brainstormed on overall cost and commonality of branding messes. I still stand by my original listing in the blog but by adding different roles in the mix, we were able to provide a depth of experience to support these 10 costly and common mistakes in SharePoint Branding and UI Development.
SharePoint User Experience: What Can it do for AdoptionMarcy Kellar
This session outlines the fundamental elements of SharePoint User Experience and how these elements impact the expectations of your users and overall user adoption See examples of both good and bad user experience design in SharePoint and the impact to user adoption. This session covers basics of usability, interaction design, and the psychology of users.
SPSColumbus - A SharePoint Designer’s Lessons LearnedMarcy Kellar
My session from SharePoint Saturday Columbus 2011 - focuses on what works and what doesn’t when redesigning a SharePoint User Interface in both SharePoint 2007 and 2010. You are invited to listen to real life stories of SharePoint Branding and User Interface redesigns--. You will walk away from this session with some key tips on how to see the red flags that could mean your SharePoint branding project is in trouble and how to manage them.
This session is intended for Project Managers, Business Decisions Makers, Architects, Designers and anyone who’s head will roll when things go wrong.
Twitter for the Newbie: How to Use TwitterMarcy Kellar
New to Twitter? Don't get it? This presentation was presented to a group of IT consultants that didn't use twitter. It provides a quick overview of the logistics of using twitter.
SharePoint User Experience Design Project Plan v1.0Marcy Kellar
This is the first draft of the User Experience timeline of a WCM/ECM SharePoint Project. I found myself drawing this on cocktail napkins at Sharepints and thought I'd pdf it for discussion.
The primary objective of creating this graphic was to explain the approximate onset of visual design in a user-centric SharePoint project. I'm interested in hearing your ideas.
Branding alone cannot support the user experience in SharePoint. The successful redesign of an existing SharePoint site is dependent on multiple factors that are often overlooked.
This session is designed for Architects, Designers, and IT Pros and includes the following:
-Common Causes of Branding Problems in SharePoint
-Demonstration of "crappy content" and impact on branding
Overview of the elements of User Experience (UX)
-Methods to improve user experience and overall look and feel without touching a master page
Expert Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) Drafting ServicesResDraft
Whether you’re looking to create a guest house, a rental unit, or a private retreat, our experienced team will design a space that complements your existing home and maximizes your investment. We provide personalized, comprehensive expert accessory dwelling unit (ADU)drafting solutions tailored to your needs, ensuring a seamless process from concept to completion.
Book Formatting: Quality Control Checks for DesignersConfidence Ago
This presentation was made to help designers who work in publishing houses or format books for printing ensure quality.
Quality control is vital to every industry. This is why every department in a company need create a method they use in ensuring quality. This, perhaps, will not only improve the quality of products and bring errors to the barest minimum, but take it to a near perfect finish.
It is beyond a moot point that a good book will somewhat be judged by its cover, but the content of the book remains king. No matter how beautiful the cover, if the quality of writing or presentation is off, that will be a reason for readers not to come back to the book or recommend it.
So, this presentation points designers to some important things that may be missed by an editor that they could eventually discover and call the attention of the editor.
Unleash Your Inner Demon with the "Let's Summon Demons" T-Shirt. Calling all fans of dark humor and edgy fashion! The "Let's Summon Demons" t-shirt is a unique way to express yourself and turn heads.
https://dribbble.com/shots/24253051-Let-s-Summon-Demons-Shirt
White wonder, Work developed by Eva TschoppMansi Shah
White Wonder by Eva Tschopp
A tale about our culture around the use of fertilizers and pesticides visiting small farms around Ahmedabad in Matar and Shilaj.
Designing Intuitive SharePoint Sites: The Science of "Easy to Use"
1. How to Make a SharePoint
Site Intuitive
The Science of “Easy-to-Use”
Presented by Marcy Kellar
SharePoint Saturday New York City #SPSNYC
2. Your Speaker: Marcy Kellar
• SharePoint Solution Architect at Perficient
• Co-author of Beginning SharePoint Designer
2010 (Wrox, October 2010)
• Professor, Art Institute, Intro to User Centered
Design” and “Usability Testing.”
• Specialties include
– SharePoint – Over 6 years experience
– User experience design (UX)
– SharePoint Branding and UI customization
– Information architecture
– Web content management
Marcy Kellar – usability testing
Twitter: @marcykellar
Blog: http://thesharepointmuse.com
Linkedin: http://linkedin.com/in/marcykellar
3. What You Will Learn Today
• How to articulate and define “easy-to-use” (and how to
measure it)
• Why your users do what they do
• Fundamentals and best practices in usability
• How to take advantage of current web conventions and
patterns
• The relationship between “easy-to-use”, psychology and
user adoption
4.
5.
6.
7. 3 Things Must Be Defined For a Site To
Be “Easy To Use”
8. This Sink Should Be Easy to Use
Sink, 33rd floor, Hard Rock Hotel, Chicago April 2012
9. Define the User to make it “Easy to Use”
Sink, 33rd floor, Hard Rock Hotel, Chicago April 2012
11. Defining Metrics
• What are you measuring?
– Time to Task?
– Completion?
– User Satisfaction?
• Be Specific
– %
– Seconds
• How will you test?
– Feedback
– Survey
– Logs
– Usability Testing
13. First Law of Usability
• Don’t Make Me THINK!!
• Thought Bubbles = The
Moment When User is
Pulled Out of Task
• Buy Steve Krug’s book,
“Don’t Make Me Think”
14. Fundamentals of Usability – The 5 E’s
• Effective
• Efficient
• Engaging
• Error Tolerant
• Easy to Learn
Photo: Courtesy of http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Elephant_side-view_Kruger.jpg
15. Fundamentals of Usability – The 5 E’s
Effectiveness – Did you do what you said you were going to
do?
Efficiency ISO 9241 defines efficiency as the total resources
expended in a task.
Engaging -An interface is engaging if it is pleasant and
satisfying to use.
Errors - Make it difficult to take incorrect actions. Make it difficult
to take invalid actions.
Easy to Learn – This one is the part people spend too much
time focusing on. So if your users have to think – make them
only think one time. Easy to learn can still be usable.
http://www.wqusability.com/articles/more-than-ease-of-use.html
16. Testing Those Metrics
• Qualitative – Users
provide anecdotal
evidence; Informal;
“feedback”
• Quantitative – Data.
Scientific. Don’t Really
Need User. (Search Fails.
404s. Logs)
Photo Courtesy of Fox Broadcasting Company
18. Better Requirement Definitions
• Efficient - "The system will improve user performance on expense
tasks by 3 minutes"
• Effective - "Less than 5% of the registrations will have errors,
omissions or inconsistencies requiring a follow-up contact by the
staff."
• Engaging - "At least 80% of employees will express comfort with
using the online system rather than visiting the HR office."
• Error Tolerant – "The system will validate all housing, meal and
tutorial choices and allow the user to confirm pricing for these
options before completing the registration."
• Easy to Learn – "Users will be able to successfully complete a
benefits calculation without needing any external instruction or help
screens."
http://www.wqusability.com/articles/more-than-ease-of-use.html
19. Better Requirement Definitions for
“Easy to Use”
• Authors will be able to upload content daily without
complaint
• Content authors will report no more than 2 errors per
month with content uploads
• Email Servers will reduce load by 50%
• Users will be able to complete expense reports 100% of
attempts.
• Users will be able to complete expense reports without
errors after receiving training.
21. What You Design For…
Steve Krug, Don’t Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability
22. The Reality…
Steve Krug, Don’t Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability
23. Questions Users Ask
• What type of site is this?
• Have I experienced a site like this
before?
• Have I been to this site before?
• Where am I?
• Where have I been?
24. Questions Users Ask
• What type of site is this?
• Have I experienced a site like this
before?
• Have I been to this site before?
• Where am I?
• Where have I been?
The answers to these questions are generally
first conveyed to the user through visual design.
26. Defining the Intuitive Factor
What Your Users What You Want
Already Know Your Users To Do
Current Target
Knowledge Knowledge
27. Defining the Intuitive Factor
What Your Users What You Want
Already Know Your Users To Do
GAP
Current Target
Knowledge Knowledge
28. Intuitive Sites
• Intuitiveness is based on the user’s current knowledge
• Design around users expectations
• Learn Design Patterns
• Follow Visual Design Best Practices
• Be Consistent
38. The Presentation Ecosystem
• Educate users • Maintain consistency to create
• Establish relationships between a sense of place
content • Effectively convey your
message to your audience
• Guide users through actions
• Emotional impact
• Focus user attention
• Make organizational systems clear • Engage and invite
• Give sites a unique personality
• Provide situational awareness
Slide Based on information created by Luke Wroblewski
48. Take Aways
• “Easy to Use” is not a good enough definition to make it so
• Usability must be considered at the beginning of a project
• Usability metrics can be defined by anecdotes or data
• To build something intuitive means understanding how users think and what
they expect
• Anyone can make a SharePoint site easy to use by considering the user, task
and defining how it will be measured.
• Users adopt what is easy and engaging
• If you don’t have user information follow web conventions for where to place
items, follow visual design guidelines and consider usability
• Visual design communicates many things to the user before one word is read
50. Where To Find Me
• Twitter: @marcykellar
• Blog: http://thesharepointmuse.com
• Linkedin: http://linkedin.com/in/marcykellar
51. Resources
• useit.com • 10 Useful Usability Findings and Guidelines
• boxesandarrows.com • 20 Do’s and Don’ts of Effective Web Design
• uxmatters.com • Usability – More than Ease of Use
• uxmag.com • http://designingwebinterfaces.com/
• Usability.gov • Gestalt Principles of Design
• Usability.net • The Gestalt Principle: Design Theory for
Web Designers
• Usability Professional’s Association
• Universal Usability Guidelines
• Standard Web Components
52. Resources: Design Patterns
• http://patternry.com
• http://ui-patterns.com
• http://mobile-patterns.com
• QUINCE: X Patterns Explorer
• Interaction Design Pattern Library
• Pattern Tap
• http://designingsocialinterfaces.com/patterns/