Design in the age of AI – Frontend Conference Zurich, 2017Zoltan Gocza
We are entering the age of machine intelligence. Facebook knows we started a new relationship sooner than our friends. Google composes automatic replies for the emails we receive. We request rides or order pizzas by simply chatting with a bot or talking to a home assistant like Amazon Echo. What’s more, we even trust billions of our savings to automated robo-advisors like Wealthfront or the Swiss Truewealth.
Packing machine intelligence into our products makes a great difference to the user experience and brings new forms of human-computer interaction to life. And with those come new challenges.
Let’s see how design will transform in the age of AI. What are the trends in designing for AI? What are the challenges and pitfalls? How will the focus of product design shift in the future? And will robots replace designers?
Design in the age of artificial intelligence / Basel, 2017Zoltan Gocza
We are entering the age of machine intelligence. Facebook knows we started a new relationship sooner than our friends. Google composes automatic replies for the emails we receive. We request rides or order pizzas by simply chatting with a bot or talking to a home assistant like Amazon Echo. What’s more, we even trust billions of our savings to automated robo-advisors like Wealthfront or the Swiss Truewealth.
Packing artificial intelligence into our products makes a great difference to the user experience and brings new forms of human-computer interaction to life. And with those come new challenges.
Let’s see how design will transform in the age of AI. What are the trends in designing for AI? What are the challenges and pitfalls? How will the focus of product design shift in the future? And will robots replace designers?
In pursuit of simplicity – UX Romandie 2015Zoltan Gocza
Simplicity is the rallying cry that unites designers. We now live in the era of flat design, minimal interfaces, hamburger menus, and doppelganger websites. When we thought the three-click rule was dead, comes the two-tap rule.
But should simplicity be the ultimate goal? Design decisions aiming for reduction often introduce more friction and cognitive load, leading to a more complex user experience. Simple-looking products often carry hidden complexity. Simplicity can easily be a “neat, plausible, and wrong” solution to a problem.
Let's dive into the idea of simplicity and dissect it. Let’s have a look at what simplicity really means, whether it's really what people want, and how on Earth do we end up having complicated products.
What is easier to decide, building a nuclear reactor or building a bicycle shed? Why do photographers put moles on models’ faces? Should you trust a designer acting on a hunch? Should you trust any individual at all or should you go for the wisdom of crowds? Or decide based on guidelines? I'll talk about such things, or something very similar. I haven't really decided yet.
This is the deck from my Pantalk in Zürich on 19.03.2015:
http://www.meetup.com/Pantalks-tech-non-tech-talks-Panter-AG-Zurich/events/220726097/
Design in the age of AI – Frontend Conference Zurich, 2017Zoltan Gocza
We are entering the age of machine intelligence. Facebook knows we started a new relationship sooner than our friends. Google composes automatic replies for the emails we receive. We request rides or order pizzas by simply chatting with a bot or talking to a home assistant like Amazon Echo. What’s more, we even trust billions of our savings to automated robo-advisors like Wealthfront or the Swiss Truewealth.
Packing machine intelligence into our products makes a great difference to the user experience and brings new forms of human-computer interaction to life. And with those come new challenges.
Let’s see how design will transform in the age of AI. What are the trends in designing for AI? What are the challenges and pitfalls? How will the focus of product design shift in the future? And will robots replace designers?
Design in the age of artificial intelligence / Basel, 2017Zoltan Gocza
We are entering the age of machine intelligence. Facebook knows we started a new relationship sooner than our friends. Google composes automatic replies for the emails we receive. We request rides or order pizzas by simply chatting with a bot or talking to a home assistant like Amazon Echo. What’s more, we even trust billions of our savings to automated robo-advisors like Wealthfront or the Swiss Truewealth.
Packing artificial intelligence into our products makes a great difference to the user experience and brings new forms of human-computer interaction to life. And with those come new challenges.
Let’s see how design will transform in the age of AI. What are the trends in designing for AI? What are the challenges and pitfalls? How will the focus of product design shift in the future? And will robots replace designers?
In pursuit of simplicity – UX Romandie 2015Zoltan Gocza
Simplicity is the rallying cry that unites designers. We now live in the era of flat design, minimal interfaces, hamburger menus, and doppelganger websites. When we thought the three-click rule was dead, comes the two-tap rule.
But should simplicity be the ultimate goal? Design decisions aiming for reduction often introduce more friction and cognitive load, leading to a more complex user experience. Simple-looking products often carry hidden complexity. Simplicity can easily be a “neat, plausible, and wrong” solution to a problem.
Let's dive into the idea of simplicity and dissect it. Let’s have a look at what simplicity really means, whether it's really what people want, and how on Earth do we end up having complicated products.
What is easier to decide, building a nuclear reactor or building a bicycle shed? Why do photographers put moles on models’ faces? Should you trust a designer acting on a hunch? Should you trust any individual at all or should you go for the wisdom of crowds? Or decide based on guidelines? I'll talk about such things, or something very similar. I haven't really decided yet.
This is the deck from my Pantalk in Zürich on 19.03.2015:
http://www.meetup.com/Pantalks-tech-non-tech-talks-Panter-AG-Zurich/events/220726097/
Egyszerű, érthető és keresetlen nyelvhasználattal kis befektetéssel is növelhető az internet banki alkalmazás használhatósága.
Finnováció, 2011. október 27.
Egyszerű, érthető és keresetlen nyelvhasználattal kis befektetéssel is növelhető az internet banki alkalmazás használhatósága.
Finnováció, 2011. október 27.
27. "There’s a vast difference
between making a design
that doesn’t suck and
creating one that people will
love to use." - Dana Chisnell
28. Jó élmény a terméket használni?
Jelentéssel
bír számomra
Élvezetes
élményt nyújt
Könnyen használható
Megbízható, pontos
Hibátlanul működik
El tudom-e végezni a feladatom?
Forrás: Stephen Anderson: Creating pleasurable interfaces
29. Jelentéssel
Működik?
bír számomra
Élvezetes
élményt nyújt
Könnyen használható
Megbízható, pontos
Hibátlanul működik
30. Jelentéssel
Megbízható?
bír számomra
Élvezetes
élményt nyújt
Könnyen használható
Megbízható, pontos
Hibátlanul működik
31. Jelentéssel
Könnyen használható?
bír számomra
Élvezetes
élményt nyújt
Könnyen használható
Megbízható, pontos
Hibátlanul működik
Aláír, Könyvel (választható, alapértelmezésben
bejelölt): hitelesítésre (aláír), illetve teljesítésre
(könyvel) is bankba küldheti megbízását. Amennyiben
egyiket sem jelöli meg, megbízása rögzítésre kerül az
„Aláírómappában”.
40. Lusták vagyunk
A kevesebb több
Egyszerre kevés dolgot mutassunk
Működjön alapból
Forrás
41. Nem tudjuk jól kifejezni, hogy mit
szeretnénk
Ne kérdezzünk közvetlenül rá, hogy
mit szeretnének a felhasználók
Legjobb, ha megfigyeljük az
embereket
Minden kutatással szemben
gyanakodjunk
42. Előzetes elképzelésünk van egy
csomó mindenről
Kapcsolódjon a termék a felhasználó
fejében lévő modellhez
Vegyük figyelembe, hogy a
felhasználók is nagyon különbözők
Kérdezzünk, kutassunk