more thoughts on Mortality & User Experience

Jan 07, 2007 11:29

Bryan Zug was kind enough to provide Ignite with video of our talks from back in December. I highly recommend Berkun, Buster, and Maxwell's talks.

I was waiting up until now to post about mine since watching it is much easier than trying to recap it...

of all the slides, with more time, I would've dug deeper on this one...


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ignite, ario, happiness, uxp, talks

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Comments 11

staticbullets January 7 2007, 19:52:34 UTC
Hi Ario,

Excellent talk, I enjoyed it greatly. I thought of you when i found this link.

Emotion & Design: Attractive things work better

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interimlover January 7 2007, 20:18:08 UTC
ah yes, Mr. Norman... definitely a big fan of his work. Did you see his response to the current simplicity craze?

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iamdonte January 7 2007, 19:59:28 UTC
ario the bodybuilder? i think that'd be pretty fucking awesome. put it back in the bowl!

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finkeljautobahn January 7 2007, 20:50:20 UTC
awesome post.

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alicetiara January 7 2007, 23:19:37 UTC
Awesome post. Although I think you might want to reconsider World's Greatest Rapper. With the East Bay blowing up this summer, the PacNW can only be next. You could be the Persian E-40.

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interimlover January 7 2007, 23:31:54 UTC
haahha! yeah, maybe I am limiting myself too much...

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mcfnord January 8 2007, 04:20:48 UTC
occasionally i think about the mere 1970's where everything was some obscure computer accountant, like the Phone Company or Bank, sending monthly statements, papers xreffed to other papers. my preferred information (broadcast t.v.) was still fundamentally deeply programmed against me. Print was indeed cheap, but even print came by a Book-mobile. In high school I'd go ten miles by bicycle to the university library, a vast ocean of wonders. My perception of computers for a decade was a solidary deed done in an isolated environment. I was active in bbs's but there was still an atomic character to the experience. (Except Chatting with the Sysop! Ctrl-z to exit.) Still, the curious people learned, as possibly they usually have through history. Did they learn as much? Is that the way to see it? When information could be of aid, hopefully they learned to use it. But it always took great telephone and postal skillz ( ... )

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