1) Attention is a finite resource that is easily distracted and drawn to novel things. User interfaces need to manage attention wisely.
2) Cognitive load, including extraneous load from poor UI design, can overwhelm users and prevent them from processing information. Novice users and those under stress have limited cognitive resources.
3) Interfaces should minimize elements, break information into digestible chunks, and account for discontinuities in user attention in order to reduce cognitive load.
Closing keynote of the Fronteers conference in Amsterdam. Blog notes are available at http://www.wait-till-i.com/2011/10/07/the-prestige-of-being-a-web-developer-fronteers-11/
Datatium - using data as a material for contextually responsive design.Andrew Fisher
Rersponsive design has changed how we build sites, however whilst we've addressed many of the technical challenges of devices we haven't understood the underlying behaviour that is occurring. This talk highlights how context is increasingly important and how data can be used to create responsive experiences beyond simply reflowing of web pages.
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.
Watch Out! What the $20 billion dollar watch industry can teach us about desi...Jainan Sankalia
Presented at Big Design 2017, look at 15 ways the watch industry creates desirability that we can apply as digital interface and interaction designers.
I really want to help people discover that:
- Data from poor market research methods add no value to business decisions and are ignored by senior execs
- Understanding human unconscious is critical in marketing and no, you don’t know much about what really drives your customers. Certainly nothing about how or why they do what they do.
- Marketing budgets are simply wasted if no-one looks at your stuff and this is avoidable.
- A s**t ad is a shit ad, no matter where you stick it.
Closing keynote of the Fronteers conference in Amsterdam. Blog notes are available at http://www.wait-till-i.com/2011/10/07/the-prestige-of-being-a-web-developer-fronteers-11/
Datatium - using data as a material for contextually responsive design.Andrew Fisher
Rersponsive design has changed how we build sites, however whilst we've addressed many of the technical challenges of devices we haven't understood the underlying behaviour that is occurring. This talk highlights how context is increasingly important and how data can be used to create responsive experiences beyond simply reflowing of web pages.
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.
Watch Out! What the $20 billion dollar watch industry can teach us about desi...Jainan Sankalia
Presented at Big Design 2017, look at 15 ways the watch industry creates desirability that we can apply as digital interface and interaction designers.
I really want to help people discover that:
- Data from poor market research methods add no value to business decisions and are ignored by senior execs
- Understanding human unconscious is critical in marketing and no, you don’t know much about what really drives your customers. Certainly nothing about how or why they do what they do.
- Marketing budgets are simply wasted if no-one looks at your stuff and this is avoidable.
- A s**t ad is a shit ad, no matter where you stick it.
How well are you delivering your experience?Andrew Fisher
The web has always had fragmentation, though not on the scale we're seeing now with new devices - and that's before we consider hybrid-touch laptops, microscreen smart watches, gesture interfaces or displays the size of a wall. Testing all the user permutations of your application is becoming almost impossible, so how do you go about working out whether you're delivering a good experience or not?
In this session, we'll look at the use of responsive design oriented analytics coupled with a few statistical methods that will help determine how well you're delivering your experiences and highlighting the areas you need to focus on next in order to maintain a decent level of coverage.
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.
Design for Physical Thinking by Jody Medich of Kicker Studiojmedich
Talk by Jody Medich, Co-Founder and Creative Director of Kicker Studio, on designing for physical thinking: the importance of Physical Interface given at IDSA 2012 in Boston.
Time to unlock the growth of your product and boost your User Onboarding!
Learn how to capture your users hearts and minds, optimize their signups, and align your in-app touch points to increase their retention from day one.
➡️ Credit @mxbraud for the design of the slides!
Designing Successful Experiences for Bald ApesEva Willis
As we squint into a bright future, let’s first glance back at the user experience industry’s well-meaning, but mostly murky past. UX’s foundation is a sordid mix of lies, shams and idiocy: We never designed experiences and things like mobile have always been adjectives, no matter how many times we sold them as nouns. Now we’re hyperventilating about designing responsively across channels.
That might seem overwhelming, but it’s really just a more complex version of what we've always done: Help a bunch of bald apes do things.
The interfaces we're building need to work in distracting environments. And we need to figure out how to cope with users' tendency to get distracted. This presentation looks at how we might achieve that. And why, I think, it's the most serious problem facing interaction designers today.
This NCDD Tech Tuesday featured Zilino, a web-based solution that enables practitioners to host deliberative online forums and other types of well structured, well facilitated engagement processes.
The webinar was hosted by Tim Bonnemann, founder and CEO of Intellitics, Inc., a long-time NCDD organizational member and co-sponsor of the 2012 NCDD Conference. Intellitics is a digital engagement startup based in San José, CA that helps its clients apply technology to support, enhance and extend participatory processes.
Intellitics is currently working with a non-profit on the East Coast to translate their in-person citizen deliberation process (National Issues Forum approach) into a meaningful online experience using Zilino. This session aimed to provide a brief overview of the tool and present insights from this ongoing project.
So much of the time, we get bogged down in senseless process, causing delays to delivery and reduced morale in the team. Agile frameworks implicitly build trust; this talk introduces the TRUST Framework, which attempts to bring trust management as an explicit part of how we effectively manage projects and relationships.
We start with this simple Axiom: maximising trust throughout the organisation, in all directions, creates a more efficient and happier working environment, resulting in higher value creation for the organisation and its stakeholders.
This talk challenges how we think about trust and cover practical actions to build trust in your teams.
How well are you delivering your experience?Andrew Fisher
The web has always had fragmentation, though not on the scale we're seeing now with new devices - and that's before we consider hybrid-touch laptops, microscreen smart watches, gesture interfaces or displays the size of a wall. Testing all the user permutations of your application is becoming almost impossible, so how do you go about working out whether you're delivering a good experience or not?
In this session, we'll look at the use of responsive design oriented analytics coupled with a few statistical methods that will help determine how well you're delivering your experiences and highlighting the areas you need to focus on next in order to maintain a decent level of coverage.
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.
Design for Physical Thinking by Jody Medich of Kicker Studiojmedich
Talk by Jody Medich, Co-Founder and Creative Director of Kicker Studio, on designing for physical thinking: the importance of Physical Interface given at IDSA 2012 in Boston.
Time to unlock the growth of your product and boost your User Onboarding!
Learn how to capture your users hearts and minds, optimize their signups, and align your in-app touch points to increase their retention from day one.
➡️ Credit @mxbraud for the design of the slides!
Designing Successful Experiences for Bald ApesEva Willis
As we squint into a bright future, let’s first glance back at the user experience industry’s well-meaning, but mostly murky past. UX’s foundation is a sordid mix of lies, shams and idiocy: We never designed experiences and things like mobile have always been adjectives, no matter how many times we sold them as nouns. Now we’re hyperventilating about designing responsively across channels.
That might seem overwhelming, but it’s really just a more complex version of what we've always done: Help a bunch of bald apes do things.
The interfaces we're building need to work in distracting environments. And we need to figure out how to cope with users' tendency to get distracted. This presentation looks at how we might achieve that. And why, I think, it's the most serious problem facing interaction designers today.
This NCDD Tech Tuesday featured Zilino, a web-based solution that enables practitioners to host deliberative online forums and other types of well structured, well facilitated engagement processes.
The webinar was hosted by Tim Bonnemann, founder and CEO of Intellitics, Inc., a long-time NCDD organizational member and co-sponsor of the 2012 NCDD Conference. Intellitics is a digital engagement startup based in San José, CA that helps its clients apply technology to support, enhance and extend participatory processes.
Intellitics is currently working with a non-profit on the East Coast to translate their in-person citizen deliberation process (National Issues Forum approach) into a meaningful online experience using Zilino. This session aimed to provide a brief overview of the tool and present insights from this ongoing project.
So much of the time, we get bogged down in senseless process, causing delays to delivery and reduced morale in the team. Agile frameworks implicitly build trust; this talk introduces the TRUST Framework, which attempts to bring trust management as an explicit part of how we effectively manage projects and relationships.
We start with this simple Axiom: maximising trust throughout the organisation, in all directions, creates a more efficient and happier working environment, resulting in higher value creation for the organisation and its stakeholders.
This talk challenges how we think about trust and cover practical actions to build trust in your teams.
Platform Security IRL: Busting Buzzwords & Building BetterEqual Experts
Practical tips and heroic war stories on how to secure a large, modern, fast software delivery platform. From building a team to building cool stuff, dealing with organisational setups to dealing with security incidents.
Zero Buzzwords Guaranteed.
Chris Rutter has spent the last few years obsessed with making security, engineering and the business work together. Starting his career as an engineer, he uses a deep understanding of Agile, Devops, and product delivery to solve security problems in a way that enables teams, rather than hitting them with bricks.
Software development practices & Infrastructure as Code - how well do they wo...Equal Experts
Infrastructure as Code (IaC) has rapidly become a key part of cloud native engineering. The hard gained experience from writing software can be applied to infrastructure, but fundamental differences means some fundamental approached need to be reconsidered. This talk will explore the implications for test driven development and build pipelines applied to IaC.
Jon Barber is an Engineer with Equal Experts.
He has been paid to write software for over 30 years, and has spent most of his time recently in the platform engineering space. He’s a keen advocate of XP values and practices, and sees himself more as an engineer than craftsman.
A Whole Team Approach to Quality in Continuous Delivery - Lisa CrispinEqual Experts
Watch the video at https://www.equalexperts.com/expert-talks/a-whole-team-approach-to-quality-in-continuous-delivery/
It’s not uncommon for teams practicing, or moving towards, continuous delivery to face a growing backlog of customer-reported bugs and struggle to maintain their deployment cadence. If a team has testers, the testers may be expected to continue with their same testing activities, without any thought as to how those can be fit into CD. Teams without testing specialists often struggle with insufficient coverage from their automated regression tests, and they may miss serious problems entirely because of inadequate exploratory testing.
How can teams build confidence to release small changes so frequently? It’s not just about testing, it’s about finding ways to build quality into the product. This interactive session will introduce:
• a pipeline visualization exercise teams can do to find ways to fit in all testing activities, including manual ones, and shorten feedback loops
• using a test suite canvas to determine the minimum automated tests needed
• ways testing specialists help teams prevent defects and transfer testing skills across the team
This is a session for everyone on the software delivery team, who may or may not have experience with continuous delivery and deployment.
SPEAKER:
Lisa Crispin
Lisa Crispin is the co-author, with Janet Gregory, of three books: Agile Testing
Condensed: A Brief Introduction, More Agile Testing: Learning Journeys for the Whole Team, Agile Testing: A Practical Guide for Testers and Agile Teams; the LiveLessons Agile Testing Essentials video course, and “The Whole Team Approach to Agile Testing” 3-day training course offered through the Agile Testing Fellowship.
Lisa was voted by her peers as the Most Influential Agile Testing Professional Person at Agile Testing Days in 2012. She is co-founder with Janet of Agile Testing Fellowship, Inc.
Please visit www.lisacrispin.com, www.agiletestingfellow.com, and www.agiletester.ca for more.
Lisa is currently a Fellow Quality Owner at OutSystems, helping with the observability practice.
When organisations begin to adopt Continuous Delivery, engineering teams begin to deliver at a pace that can create a strain on other parts of the business. Security teams often struggle to adapt to this faster delivery model, but that doesn’t need to be the case.
In this talk, Stuart will discuss a few ways you can take advantage of continuous delivery to make security a first class citizen of software engineering. Grounding the theory with real world experience, he’ll share a few stories of how other organisations have used these ideas to transform their delivery.
SPEAKER: Stuart Gunter
Stuart is the Security Practice Lead at Equal Experts. He has over 20 years experience in software engineering, architecture and security. He has worked with a variety of public and private sector organisations across a range of industries, helping them effectively embed security within agile delivery.
Smoothing the continuous delivery path a tale of two architectures - expert...Equal Experts
What makes Continuous Delivery easy and what makes it hard?
How much impact do your tech and architectural choices have on it?
Should you start with a .Net monolith or go-lang microservices?
This session shares lessons learnt by two teams, with very different tech and architectures, but who both were successful in their continuous delivery journey.
Speaker:
Lyndsay Prewer
Lyndsay is an agile delivery consultant with over 20 years' experience of helping individuals, teams and organisations improve their software delivery. He’s currently working with Equal Experts, at a variety of public and private sector clients.
Embracing collaborative chaos (April 2020) by Lyndsay PrewerEqual Experts
Today’s systems are inherently complex, with some component parts often operating in or close to suboptimal or failure modes. Left unchecked, as complexity increases, the compounding of failure modes will inevitably lead to catastrophic system failure.
Chaos Days help us address this risk by spending time deliberately inducing failures, then analysing the response.
This session summarises our experience of running Chaos Days on a large scale platform. We’ll explore the what, why, how and when of running a Chaos Day, plus tips for running them remotely.
Design Systems: Designing out Waste, Designing in ConsistencyEqual Experts
Design Systems help modern innovative companies build new software quickly without waste and with a consistent look and feel.
They are the single source of truth to allow the teams to design, realise and develop a product.
From our work with Design Systems for Equal Experts' clients we have many learnings to share about benefits and risks and what needs to be overcome to get a system live and adopted.
SPEAKER: David Hawdale. Product and UX person at Equal Experts.
Contact www.equalexperts.com
Contact David: david.hawdale@hawdale-associates.co.uk
Growing Together - software development in the Developing worldEqual Experts
Earlier this year EE partnered with VSO to help farmers in rural Bangladesh. This is the story of how we went from inception to production in four weeks and the challenges of developing software half the world away from home
Infrastructure - a journey from datacentres to cloudEqual Experts
What is infrastructure, and how do I avoid it forever? Where does the software that runs so much of the world, actually run? In this talk, we look at the terms "infrastructure" and "platform", what they currently mean and how they are built and managed; we rant about how bad a metaphor "The Cloud" is; and we speculate wildly about the future for our servers, our planet and ourselves
Data Science In Action: Prenatal Screening for Down SyndromeEqual Experts
Disorders like Down Syndrome have serious health implications for both the baby and mother, meaning that robust screening is crucial. Traditional means however, carry an unacceptable miscarriage risk. Using blood tests and machine learning we are able to accurately and safely predict whether a fetus will have Down Syndrome within weeks of conception.
The essentials of the IT industry or What I wish I was taught about at Univer...Equal Experts
University taught me a lot, but after getting my first job I quickly realised that I was lacking many skills that I had never even heard about or not realised how important they were. In this talk I will introduce you to notions and tools that are used on a daily basis in the industry, such as version control and coding patterns. This will give you a list of items that you should explore and use to get yourself ready for the real IT world.
This talk discusses how a FTSE 100 publishing house confronted the urgent need to transform to meet the challenges and opportunities created by a changing world. Despite the fact that there was plenty of time, money and will to succeed, almost straight away, their situation was revealed to be much harder than they first thought...
Telling the true story of the publishers’ attempt to navigate the choppy waters of changing ways of working combined with high levels of uncertainty, the talk covers George Harrison, Keswick Pencil Museum, the philosopher Karl Popper and Middlemarch by George Eliot. Along the way, three key lessons that were learned the hard way are shared, to help you avoid making the same mistakes.
Speaker : David Cox - Transformation Manager at Equal Experts
Obstacles of Digital Transformation EvolutionEqual Experts
The talk will focus on some things that any consultant or leader should consider when entering into an organisation that has a stated desire to transform into the most Digital organisation possible.
Speaker: Ryan Bryers, Digital Transformation and Leadership, Equal Experts
Talk given by Chris Rutter
Avoiding The Security Brick
An exploration of some common scenarios when security teams and processes seriously impact product delivery and result in questionable security benefits, and some battle-proven techniques on how to work more effectively with security while delivering at pace
Chris Rutter.
A Security Engineer / Transformation specialist who cut his teeth writing Java in Agile environments, then moved into Security Architecture and now helps teams secure their systems by making security technical rather than a tick box.
Talk given by Lyndsay Prewer Technical Delivery Manager at Equal Experts at ExpertTalks Leeds on June 11 2019.
Embracing Collaborative Chaos
Today’s systems are inherently complex, with some component parts often operating in or close to suboptimal or failure modes. Left unchecked, as complexity increases, the compounding of failure modes will inevitably lead to catastrophic system failure. Chaos Days help us address this risk by spending time deliberately inducing failures, then analysing the response.
This session summarises our experience of running Chaos Days on a large scale platform. We’ll explore the what, why, how and when of running a Chaos Day.
Talk given by Phil Parker (Partner at Equal Experts) at ExpertTalks Berlin, 14th June 2018.
Running a build server does not mean you are *doing* Continuous Delivery.
An OWASP Top 10 poster on the wall does not mean you are *doing* Information Security.
This talk explores what the real important factors of Continuous Delivery are, does the same for Information Security and then focusses in on how the two intersect and interact.
Developers, testers, ops (and anyone else working on tech teams) will learn why Continuous Delivery is actually MORE secure than the alternatives.
Talk given by Phil Parker (Partner at Equal Experts) at ExpertTalks Sydney, 27th February 2018.
Continuous Delivery requires “a close, collaborative working relationship between everyone involved in delivery” but - as you are probably all too aware - most organisations don’t structure teams (or software) to achieve this.
This talk explores what the communications structures of our organisations really are, and how they should best serve the systems we design? A Continuous Delivery talk with no mention of Continuous Integration, virtually nothing on Deployment Pipelines and a real effort not to mention DevOps (people, teams or mindset!) This is a lot about Organisations and Domains (a definition of the latter will be forthcoming), but mostly it’s about People…
Cracking passwords via common topologiesEqual Experts
Hugo Ferreira, one of our Developers, presented this talk – "Cracking Passwords via Common Topologies"" – during Pizza Talks Lisbon, on the 29th of November 2017
Description:
A brief overview of how typical password complexity policies and common human behaviour conspire to create easily hackable systems, and what you can do about it as a developer.
Useful Links:
* [OWASP](https://www.owasp.org)
* [Testing Guide](https://www.owasp.org/index.php/OWASP_Testing_Guide_v4_Table_of_Contents) for securing web applications
* [Authentication Cheat Sheet](https://www.owasp.org/index.php?title=Authentication_Cheat_Sheet)
* [Have I been pwned? Check if your email has been compromised in a data breach](https://haveibeenpwned.com/)
* [Pwned websites](https://haveibeenpwned.com/PwnedWebsites)
* [Pwned Passwords](https://haveibeenpwned.com/Passwords)
* [dropbox/zxcvbn: Low-Budget Password Strength Estimation](https://github.com/dropbox/zxcvbn)
* [test zxcvbn interactively](https://lowe.github.io/tryzxcvbn/)
* [KoreBlog PathWell - Top 100 common topologies](https://blog.korelogic.com/blog/2014/04/04/pathwell_topologies)
How Recreation Management Software Can Streamline Your Operations.pptxwottaspaceseo
Recreation management software streamlines operations by automating key tasks such as scheduling, registration, and payment processing, reducing manual workload and errors. It provides centralized management of facilities, classes, and events, ensuring efficient resource allocation and facility usage. The software offers user-friendly online portals for easy access to bookings and program information, enhancing customer experience. Real-time reporting and data analytics deliver insights into attendance and preferences, aiding in strategic decision-making. Additionally, effective communication tools keep participants and staff informed with timely updates. Overall, recreation management software enhances efficiency, improves service delivery, and boosts customer satisfaction.
Developing Distributed High-performance Computing Capabilities of an Open Sci...Globus
COVID-19 had an unprecedented impact on scientific collaboration. The pandemic and its broad response from the scientific community has forged new relationships among public health practitioners, mathematical modelers, and scientific computing specialists, while revealing critical gaps in exploiting advanced computing systems to support urgent decision making. Informed by our team’s work in applying high-performance computing in support of public health decision makers during the COVID-19 pandemic, we present how Globus technologies are enabling the development of an open science platform for robust epidemic analysis, with the goal of collaborative, secure, distributed, on-demand, and fast time-to-solution analyses to support public health.
Cyaniclab : Software Development Agency Portfolio.pdfCyanic lab
CyanicLab, an offshore custom software development company based in Sweden,India, Finland, is your go-to partner for startup development and innovative web design solutions. Our expert team specializes in crafting cutting-edge software tailored to meet the unique needs of startups and established enterprises alike. From conceptualization to execution, we offer comprehensive services including web and mobile app development, UI/UX design, and ongoing software maintenance. Ready to elevate your business? Contact CyanicLab today and let us propel your vision to success with our top-notch IT solutions.
Enhancing Research Orchestration Capabilities at ORNL.pdfGlobus
Cross-facility research orchestration comes with ever-changing constraints regarding the availability and suitability of various compute and data resources. In short, a flexible data and processing fabric is needed to enable the dynamic redirection of data and compute tasks throughout the lifecycle of an experiment. In this talk, we illustrate how we easily leveraged Globus services to instrument the ACE research testbed at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility with flexible data and task orchestration capabilities.
Enhancing Project Management Efficiency_ Leveraging AI Tools like ChatGPT.pdfJay Das
With the advent of artificial intelligence or AI tools, project management processes are undergoing a transformative shift. By using tools like ChatGPT, and Bard organizations can empower their leaders and managers to plan, execute, and monitor projects more effectively.
Understanding Globus Data Transfers with NetSageGlobus
NetSage is an open privacy-aware network measurement, analysis, and visualization service designed to help end-users visualize and reason about large data transfers. NetSage traditionally has used a combination of passive measurements, including SNMP and flow data, as well as active measurements, mainly perfSONAR, to provide longitudinal network performance data visualization. It has been deployed by dozens of networks world wide, and is supported domestically by the Engagement and Performance Operations Center (EPOC), NSF #2328479. We have recently expanded the NetSage data sources to include logs for Globus data transfers, following the same privacy-preserving approach as for Flow data. Using the logs for the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) as an example, this talk will walk through several different example use cases that NetSage can answer, including: Who is using Globus to share data with my institution, and what kind of performance are they able to achieve? How many transfers has Globus supported for us? Which sites are we sharing the most data with, and how is that changing over time? How is my site using Globus to move data internally, and what kind of performance do we see for those transfers? What percentage of data transfers at my institution used Globus, and how did the overall data transfer performance compare to the Globus users?
Listen to the keynote address and hear about the latest developments from Rachana Ananthakrishnan and Ian Foster who review the updates to the Globus Platform and Service, and the relevance of Globus to the scientific community as an automation platform to accelerate scientific discovery.
Into the Box Keynote Day 2: Unveiling amazing updates and announcements for modern CFML developers! Get ready for exciting releases and updates on Ortus tools and products. Stay tuned for cutting-edge innovations designed to boost your productivity.
AI Pilot Review: The World’s First Virtual Assistant Marketing SuiteGoogle
AI Pilot Review: The World’s First Virtual Assistant Marketing Suite
👉👉 Click Here To Get More Info 👇👇
https://sumonreview.com/ai-pilot-review/
AI Pilot Review: Key Features
✅Deploy AI expert bots in Any Niche With Just A Click
✅With one keyword, generate complete funnels, websites, landing pages, and more.
✅More than 85 AI features are included in the AI pilot.
✅No setup or configuration; use your voice (like Siri) to do whatever you want.
✅You Can Use AI Pilot To Create your version of AI Pilot And Charge People For It…
✅ZERO Manual Work With AI Pilot. Never write, Design, Or Code Again.
✅ZERO Limits On Features Or Usages
✅Use Our AI-powered Traffic To Get Hundreds Of Customers
✅No Complicated Setup: Get Up And Running In 2 Minutes
✅99.99% Up-Time Guaranteed
✅30 Days Money-Back Guarantee
✅ZERO Upfront Cost
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
Gamify Your Mind; The Secret Sauce to Delivering Success, Continuously Improv...Shahin Sheidaei
Games are powerful teaching tools, fostering hands-on engagement and fun. But they require careful consideration to succeed. Join me to explore factors in running and selecting games, ensuring they serve as effective teaching tools. Learn to maintain focus on learning objectives while playing, and how to measure the ROI of gaming in education. Discover strategies for pitching gaming to leadership. This session offers insights, tips, and examples for coaches, team leads, and enterprise leaders seeking to teach from simple to complex concepts.
top nidhi software solution freedownloadvrstrong314
This presentation emphasizes the importance of data security and legal compliance for Nidhi companies in India. It highlights how online Nidhi software solutions, like Vector Nidhi Software, offer advanced features tailored to these needs. Key aspects include encryption, access controls, and audit trails to ensure data security. The software complies with regulatory guidelines from the MCA and RBI and adheres to Nidhi Rules, 2014. With customizable, user-friendly interfaces and real-time features, these Nidhi software solutions enhance efficiency, support growth, and provide exceptional member services. The presentation concludes with contact information for further inquiries.
Field Employee Tracking System| MiTrack App| Best Employee Tracking Solution|...informapgpstrackings
Keep tabs on your field staff effortlessly with Informap Technology Centre LLC. Real-time tracking, task assignment, and smart features for efficient management. Request a live demo today!
For more details, visit us : https://informapuae.com/field-staff-tracking/
Software Engineering, Software Consulting, Tech Lead.
Spring Boot, Spring Cloud, Spring Core, Spring JDBC, Spring Security,
Spring Transaction, Spring MVC,
Log4j, REST/SOAP WEB-SERVICES.
Climate Science Flows: Enabling Petabyte-Scale Climate Analysis with the Eart...Globus
The Earth System Grid Federation (ESGF) is a global network of data servers that archives and distributes the planet’s largest collection of Earth system model output for thousands of climate and environmental scientists worldwide. Many of these petabyte-scale data archives are located in proximity to large high-performance computing (HPC) or cloud computing resources, but the primary workflow for data users consists of transferring data, and applying computations on a different system. As a part of the ESGF 2.0 US project (funded by the United States Department of Energy Office of Science), we developed pre-defined data workflows, which can be run on-demand, capable of applying many data reduction and data analysis to the large ESGF data archives, transferring only the resultant analysis (ex. visualizations, smaller data files). In this talk, we will showcase a few of these workflows, highlighting how Globus Flows can be used for petabyte-scale climate analysis.
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/
Prosigns: Transforming Business with Tailored Technology SolutionsProsigns
Unlocking Business Potential: Tailored Technology Solutions by Prosigns
Discover how Prosigns, a leading technology solutions provider, partners with businesses to drive innovation and success. Our presentation showcases our comprehensive range of services, including custom software development, web and mobile app development, AI & ML solutions, blockchain integration, DevOps services, and Microsoft Dynamics 365 support.
Custom Software Development: Prosigns specializes in creating bespoke software solutions that cater to your unique business needs. Our team of experts works closely with you to understand your requirements and deliver tailor-made software that enhances efficiency and drives growth.
Web and Mobile App Development: From responsive websites to intuitive mobile applications, Prosigns develops cutting-edge solutions that engage users and deliver seamless experiences across devices.
AI & ML Solutions: Harnessing the power of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning, Prosigns provides smart solutions that automate processes, provide valuable insights, and drive informed decision-making.
Blockchain Integration: Prosigns offers comprehensive blockchain solutions, including development, integration, and consulting services, enabling businesses to leverage blockchain technology for enhanced security, transparency, and efficiency.
DevOps Services: Prosigns' DevOps services streamline development and operations processes, ensuring faster and more reliable software delivery through automation and continuous integration.
Microsoft Dynamics 365 Support: Prosigns provides comprehensive support and maintenance services for Microsoft Dynamics 365, ensuring your system is always up-to-date, secure, and running smoothly.
Learn how our collaborative approach and dedication to excellence help businesses achieve their goals and stay ahead in today's digital landscape. From concept to deployment, Prosigns is your trusted partner for transforming ideas into reality and unlocking the full potential of your business.
Join us on a journey of innovation and growth. Let's partner for success with Prosigns.
TROUBLESHOOTING 9 TYPES OF OUTOFMEMORYERRORTier1 app
Even though at surface level ‘java.lang.OutOfMemoryError’ appears as one single error; underlyingly there are 9 types of OutOfMemoryError. Each type of OutOfMemoryError has different causes, diagnosis approaches and solutions. This session equips you with the knowledge, tools, and techniques needed to troubleshoot and conquer OutOfMemoryError in all its forms, ensuring smoother, more efficient Java applications.
In software engineering, the right architecture is essential for robust, scalable platforms. Wix has undergone a pivotal shift from event sourcing to a CRUD-based model for its microservices. This talk will chart the course of this pivotal journey.
Event sourcing, which records state changes as immutable events, provided robust auditing and "time travel" debugging for Wix Stores' microservices. Despite its benefits, the complexity it introduced in state management slowed development. Wix responded by adopting a simpler, unified CRUD model. This talk will explore the challenges of event sourcing and the advantages of Wix's new "CRUD on steroids" approach, which streamlines API integration and domain event management while preserving data integrity and system resilience.
Participants will gain valuable insights into Wix's strategies for ensuring atomicity in database updates and event production, as well as caching, materialization, and performance optimization techniques within a distributed system.
Join us to discover how Wix has mastered the art of balancing simplicity and extensibility, and learn how the re-adoption of the modest CRUD has turbocharged their development velocity, resilience, and scalability in a high-growth environment.
12. Physical UIs aren’t exempt either. If you ever want to
start an argument at a software conference, ask
everyone how to turn the heat up on this shower.
13. Long story short: I left academia …
… so I could do more research. Only half joking.
16. This phone’s UI animates semi-randomly. I imagine it
talking to itself, but it’s also sort of talking to us.
17. When I watch The Big Bang theory, my attention is
constantly tugging at my sleeve, like a small child:
“Hey look — they have the same omelette pan we do!”
18. Attention is really good at pointing out things we
didn’t even know we’d noticed. Like this Twitter logo.
20. getting your attention
doesn’t cost much
(but…)
The cost of having your attention so readily available all
the time is that it can be distracted by one thing and
might miss something else — something important.
21. keeping attention
This slide literally fades. It’s really hard to sustain
attention for long periods of time. You need something:
motivation, blood sugar, whatever.
22. keeping your attention
has a cost
‘resource depletion’
Did I mention that attention is a finite resource?
Spend your users’ attention wisely.
24. attention to detail
is soluble in discontinuity
the following slide shows a visual effect that isn’t going
to translate well to slideshare. Go look on YouTube for
some videos of ‘flicker’ and ‘change blindness’.
25. When this image flickers, the yellow saddle cover and
the logo on the bag appear and disappear. It takes a
few go-rounds to notice, because of the visual glitch.
26. change blindness
Essentially, any time you get a visual interruption, you’re
vulnerable to this, as your visual system reassesses the
scene but doesn’t always notice small changes.
28. I first noticed this happening in software when
we were testing a prototype feature at Skype
29. You could go to someone’s profile and add tags
(very much like Google+ does ‘circles’)
30. I may have forgotten to say that this might even
have been a separate screen rather than a modal;
I forget, sorry. My point stands, though.
31. People were all “Wait — what just happened? Did it add
the tags?” They had missed a minor detail changing
because the whole screen had effectively changed too.
33. One way of helping users (especially novice users)
see the effects of their behaviour in a complex UI
is to highlight changes using animation.
34.
35. But if the animation appears too soon
after the previous screen, it’s easy to miss
36. attentional blink
(180 - 450 ms. ish.)
This is basically a refractory period following a visual
perception event. Don’t introduce anything new
that you want people to notice during this time.
38. If you use a really long slow fadeout on animations, that
might not be very noticeable either. Fades lasting just a
few seconds are harder to perceive than faster ones.
39. I faded this slide into the next slide over 6 seconds
40. HELLO
#uxcam
… not everybody spotted the change the first time.
(it’s only a detail and doesn’t alter our sense of
what’s happening in the scene overall)
41. change blindness
So yeah, change blindness can occur through visual
discontinuity and through slow gradual changes
(guess what: you’re blinking during those)
42. michaelbach.de
Go check out this animation. Concentrate on the
central green flashing dot and watch as the yellow
dots seem to disappear (they don’t really)
43. inattentional blindness
I didn’t even mention the gorilla clip (if you haven’t
seen it, google it). When we attend closely to one
thing, we can can totally overlook peripheral things.
44. attention and memory
…kinda cousins,
kinda flakey
Psychologists would absolutely distinguish
between attention and memory. What they
have in common is that neither is very good :-S
45. working memory
You might know this as ‘short-term memory’. For our
purposes, they’re essentially the same thing.
46. I worked on this game for a bit.
The aim: memorise a shape.
47. Then the shape goes away
and you have to draw it from memory.
50. Breaking it down, this is the feedback we were asking
people to understand. There’s a lot going on, and the
shape is kind of obscured by the feedback.
52. Using blue feedback preserves the shape we’re
trying to get right, and reduces the
number of things we need to remember.
53. as simple as possible
but no simpler
Einstein was a smart guy (!) As little info as possible,
but don’t remove so much that you end up
making people’s lives more complicated.
54. GOV.UK strives to do this. It’s hard; people come to the
site for a lot of very different reasons.
55. 1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
We recently worked on a date-picker that reminded me
of something. While shading indicating availability is
helpful for e-commerce, it got in the way a bit.
56. X X X
X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X
Too many things!
57.
58. 1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
On the second pass, we came up with something that
had less information in it, but still enough to accomplish
the task at hand (booking an appointment)
59. X X X
X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X
X X X X X X X
Fewer things
60. We’ve also seen this play out in form design. Long
pages full of form fields tended to elicit error messages
because people would miss a field and not notice.
61. We pared it down as much as we could;
I haven’t really seen anyone miss a field since.
62. W T M H Y E L A B P P
This much info is hard to remember …
63. W T M H Y E L A B P P
…until you realise its the first line of That’s Amore, at
which point it’s easy to remember the whole thing.
64. chunking
Chunking is when we use our larger knowledge about a
thing to chunk lots of discrete bits of info into a single
bite — like knowing London phones are 0207 or 0208.
65. cognitive load
This has kind of been a thing in psychology for the last
little while; it’s nice to see UX talking about it too.
66. intrinsic cognitive load
Some information is inherently more complicated than
other information, because it has more moving parts.
We can’t do much about this other than be aware.
67. A
C
E
D
F
B
novice view
If you’re a novice looking to learn this thing, you have to
learn what all the moving parts are, and their
relationships — an expensive cognitive load.
68. A
C
E
D
F
B
expert view
Experts will view the information in very different ways —
they already know something about it, and that detail
and structure = less of a cognitive burden for them.
71. high extraneous load
The happily-now-defunct UKBA visas information site.
Extraneous cognitive load all over the place.
72. Sometimes, stuff with a high cognitive load is easier to
just ignore. Lots of users skim straight through long
pages of blurb and check ‘No’ without reading.
75. the first-time user
Cognitive load really comes into its own when we
consider novice users and how much extra work we’re
making them do compared to more practiced users.
77. This bugs me less, partly because there are fewer steps,
and partly because this is a financial transaction and it’s
worth taking time to reassure users. Money = fraught.
78. This was a spectacularly jarring experience I had
recently. The same service on two platforms should
have at least passing resemblance. Cognitive load!
79. being a novice
is a lot like
being stressed
Cognitively speaking, that is.
82. even less info
if people might be scared
What novices and people under stress have in common
is they can’t process much new information. So be kind.
83. My personal bete noire. This website has actually made
me cry. The consequences of getting something wrong
are huge; stress leads to cognitive shutdown.
84. mobile first
This is such a good solution to problems of ‘too much’.
Mad love to @lukew for spreading the word here.
85. When you can only fit so much on a screen, you have to
be REALLY picky. We work with amazing content
designers from GDS who are ruthless (in good ways)
92. Think carefully about how much information you give
during onboarding. Could some of it be introduced a
bit later, when people have developed a schema?
93. Strive to minimise extraneous cognitive load, especially
when dealing with the cross-platform experience