Title | : | UX Magic |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | - |
Format Type | : | Kindle Edition |
Number of Pages | : | 781 |
Publication | : | Published January 9, 2020 |
UX Magic Reviews
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Had high hopes on this book as an educator and interaction designer. In all fairness it’s quite dense and is referencing so many resources that it might take a while to go through it (needless to say you can practice as much you want along reading it). However I felt I was often struggling to guess what was on the author’s mind, or even more how did this process was shaped up by students’ experience on this course, so ultimately the experience of reading this was not optimal. I was under the impression that a lot of the chosen terms are not used in the industry anymore in the way that are used in this book (who uses the term as a design pattern category?). I’ve also felt the supporting design cases were badly designed / illustrated. The type of interaction needed for this to be a useful educational resource for students made me think this was not meant to be a book at all 😞
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This will be my design bible going forward. Daniel lays out the connective tissue between requirements definition and ideation that I have always felt missing in most design processes. Conceptual modeling has already helped a colleague simplify and refine their user tasks on a project, leading to an improved user experience. Highly recommended.
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I like the concept of Object-based design. Generally, websites are designed by features. This book recommends identifying objects and actions performed on them. I highly recomend.