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On any team, there are two groups. The people who make the design decisions. The people who refer to themselves as the designers. The first group is the most important. A Tale of Two Designers Meet Designer Anne. She just came out of a meeting with the developers on her team. At the end of the meeting, the lead developer turned towards her and asked if they could do one of those sketching sessions
Watch, listen & learn from the world’s best UX experts. Search & Discovery Patterns Almost every site has a search function. But, do they all work as well as they could? More importantly, how is your site's search doing? Are users abandoning the site in frustration, because they can't find what they want? The abundance and variation of search implementations out there present a challenge to design
By Jared M. Spool Originally published: Jan 14, 2009 [While Luke Wroblewski was writing his well-received book, Web Form Design: Filling in the Blanks, he asked if I could think of an example where a change in a form's design made a noticeable difference in business. "You mean like $300 million of new revenue?" I responded. "Yes, like that." said Luke. So I wrote this article, which he published i
By Luke Wroblewski Originally published: Jun 26, 2007 “Input elements should be organized in logical groups so that your brain can process the form layout in chunks of related fields.” –HTML: the Definitive Guide Quite rare is the Web application that doesn’t make extensive use of forms for data input and configuration. But not all Web applications use forms consistently. Variations in the al
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