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Posted: November 8th, 2010 | Author: Mark Connolly | Filed under: Events | Tags: waterloo | No Comments »
Here’s an event that may be of interest to uxWaterloo folks.
November 13 is the date for the 11th annual Inter-University Workshop, hosted at the University of Waterloo. The purpose of this day-long workshop is to bring universities and industry together to explore current issues in human factors and ergonomics. It is intended to be quite informal and presenters will discuss past research, work in progress, and ideas related to human factors engineering. Please join us for a great schedule of student speakers!
For those who cannot make it to attend the workshop, all the presentations being webcast by the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society. Show your support by virtually attending one or more of these presentations. It is a free, day-long webinar, open to all. You can come and go as you please during the day. The webinar starts at 8:45am EST and ends at 4pm EST. There are 15 different speakers throughout the day. The schedule is found at: http://hfes.uwaterloo.ca/iuw/?page_id=17
To register for the FREE Webinar on November 13, go to: https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/707607051
To register to attend the workshop, go to: http://hfes.uwaterloo.ca/iuw/?page_id=62
Date and location
Saturday, November 13, 2010
8:45 am to 9:00 pm
Davic Centre, DC 1301
University of Waterloo
Posted: October 25th, 2010 | Author: Mark Connolly | Filed under: Events | Tags: design, Google | No Comments »
November has turned into an exciting month for uxWaterloo. We now have a second meeting in addition to our previously announced November 24 meeting on user experience at RIM.
Imagine an ideal design for your friend. Now make it work for your parents. Your entire neighbourhood. Your town, province, and entire country. Then throw in a couple of continents’ worth of users for good measure. Adam Baker, a user interface designer at Google, will conduct a hands-on workshop about “designing for everyone,” inspired by lessons learned working on Google Search. He’ll guide a discussion of techniques, tradeoffs, design language, and ways of understanding so many users that you couldn’t possibly truly understand them.
Adam is currently a designer at Google.org in San Francisco, working on projects related to climate change adaptation and public health. While at Google he’s contributed to a variety of projects from search UI to public data visualization to web annotation. A Canadian native, he previously directed design at Marketcircle in Toronto, and worked in UX evangelism at Apple.
We have not yet finalized the location for this event, but we wanted folks to have a chance to get it into their calendars since it’s not that many weeks away. Location is shown below.
Time/location details:
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Accelerator Centre
Meeting Room #2
295 Hagey Blvd., Waterloo
[Map]
To help us better prepare, please register for this event. Registration is full!
Posted: October 20th, 2010 | Author: Mark Connolly | Filed under: Events | Tags: design research, RIM, user experience | 2 Comments »
We have a special treat for November.
Joey Benedek, RIM’s Director of UX Research, will discuss how RIM approaches designing the Blackberry user experience. Joey will discuss the importance of the UX to the Blackberry development process, basic outline of the process and the key disciplines that play a role. Come hear how the UX process was applied to the development of Blackberry6 with specific examples from the recent release.
Joey joined Research in Motion as Director if UX Research in the summer of 2009, just in time to kick off the Blackberry6 development effort. Prior to RIM, Joey spent 9 years at Microsoft spending most of his time in the User Experience organization for Windows finishing his career there as the UX Research manager for Windows 7. Originally from Canada, RIM has provided a homecoming for Joey who completed his graduate work at Carleton’s HCI lab.
Time/location details:
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Accelerator Centre
Meeting Room #2
295 Hagey Blvd., Waterloo
[Map]
Posted: September 30th, 2010 | Author: Julie Rutherford | Filed under: Events | 1 Comment »
Can you believe it’s the last day of September? It feels like it’s zoomed by and now we can look forward to our next uxWaterloo meeting on October 21st!
In our September event, we had a ton of fun taking…the MARSHMALLOW CHALLENGE!
We split up into groups and each team was given dry spaghetti, tape, string and a marshmallow. After hearing the rules, each group took on the challenge to build the tallest structure with the materials at hand. Then, once the time was up, the structure had to be sturdy enough to be able to hold a marshmallow on top!
Our groups were able to build some great free-standing structures, but unfortunately a few couldn’t withstand the weight of the marshmallow by the time of the judging!
Then, we watched a great TED talk video at www.marshmallowchallenge.com and got an overview of the purpose of this design challenge and laughed along once we realized that kids are better at this challenge than adults!
After the activity and the video, we discussed what we learned. We realized that kids were probably better at this challenge, as they are NOT as afraid to test something, fail, and try again. They continually prototype until they find an effective design. Kids also would not make as many assumptions about their resources as adults, so they would inspect the spaghetti and feel the weight of the marshmallow. We didn’t think of that and were so surprised when our structures toppled once we added the marshmallow!
Overall, this was a great activity that we all thought would be valuable to do with project teams to help them understand the value of continual prototyping and usability testing. When we are launching websites, all need to remember…the user is not just a marshmallow we can plop on at the end! 😉
Posted: September 29th, 2010 | Author: Mark Connolly | Filed under: Events | Tags: design, mobile, user experience | No Comments »
For today’s meeting we’ll hear from James Wu, UI Architect at Kobo, about making the transition from designing for a web/desktop to designing for a mobile user experience. Issues that he’ll address include smaller screen, touch screen, gestural UI, wildly different user contexts, and unreliable connectivity.
Kobo is a company dedicated to enabling people to “read any book, anytime, anywhere, and on the device of their choice”. To that end, they’ve created a suite of products that run on iOS (iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad), Android smart phones, RIM BlackBerry smart phones, and even their own well-regarded Kobo eReader.
James has a great depth and breadth of experience, and is an engaging and generous speaker.
Time/location details:
Thursday, October 21, 2010
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Accelerator Centre
Meeting Room #2
295 Hagey Blvd., Waterloo
[Map]
Posted: September 10th, 2010 | Author: Mark Connolly | Filed under: Events | Tags: design | 2 Comments »
We’re kicking off a new season of events with an exciting design workshop!
For this workshop we’ll break up into groups to solve a specific design problem, which we’ll reveal at the start of the session, in a fixed amount of time. We’ll then take a look at the results, examine the merits of various approaches, and even watch a related film.
It’s an opportunity to collaborate with your fellow uxWaterloo attendees and learn how we all approach design. Maybe we’ll all learn something new!
Time/location details:
Thursday, September 16, 2010
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Accelerator Centre
Meeting Room #2
295 Hagey Blvd., Waterloo
Posted: July 30th, 2010 | Author: Mark Connolly | Filed under: Events | Tags: user experience | No Comments »
For our August meeting, deep in the dog days of summer, we’re convening again at a local bar for an evening of food, drink, and fine conversation. As a way of getting the conversational ball rolling, we’ll explore how each of us made our way into a UX-related position. For those of you not in such a position, we can look at ways in which a UX-oriented viewpoint and techniques can be introduced into your current position.
Come on out and enjoy a night of camaraderie and UX chatter.
August meeting
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Barley Works, Huether Hotel, 59 King Street North, Waterloo, ON N2J 2X2
Please register for this UX Group event. Thanks! Hope to see you there
Posted: July 11th, 2010 | Author: Mark Connolly | Filed under: Events | Tags: conference, usability, user experience | No Comments »
Thursday, July 22, 2010
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Accelerator Centre
Meeting Room #2
295 Hagey Blvd., Waterloo
[Map]
This month’s meeting focuses on highlights from the 2010 UPA and UX Lx conferences. James Stewart and Ryan DeGorter, two of our group members, recently attended these conferences in Europe. They will each present highlights of what they learned, with an opportunity for questions and discussion too. We’ve had some great discussions in recent meetings, and this month is certain to be no exception.
Topics under discussion will include:
Please click here to register for this UX Group event. Thanks! Hope to see you there.
Posted: June 29th, 2010 | Author: Katie Cerar | Filed under: Events | Tags: think aloud, usability, user research | No Comments »
Last Thursday, June 24th, the UX Group met to learn more about the Think Aloud method from Guelph Master’s student, Amy Gill. Amy graciously gave us a presentation on her Master’s work, which has been focussing on learning about the psychology roots of the Think Aloud method, and how it can and should be used by UX practitioners today. We had almost 30 attendees this month, which made the discussions lively and insightful.
The session taught us a lot of about how Think Aloud was created, and some very interesting guidelines for how to use the method to gather the best results. The presentation was a great lead-in to an exciting discussion. Amy brought to light a number of interesting points, including:
- Think Aloud was originally created in the psychology tradition to learn about the thought processes inside of subjects’ heads
- We can gather great quotes to convince others of changes that need to be made
- It can provide us with insight into the mental models and the assumptions of the user
- The method doesn’t alter though patterns if we stick to level 1 and level 2 statements that do not require extra thinking or meta thinking.
- When we ask “Why?” the user has to start thinking about what they should say – altering their thoughts
- Asking “Why?” can also produce inaccurate reports as users tell us what they think we want to hear
After Amy’s presentation, the discussion broadened to include topics such as:
- When we ask “Why?”
- How we know when usability testing is being done “correctly” or is having a positive impact
- How people in the community incorporate usability testing, and when
If you missed Amy’s presentation, she has graciously provided us with a number of resources which were used or mentioned throughout her talk:
Thanks to Amy and everyone who showed up to see her present and participate in the insightful discussions. See you in July!
Posted: June 23rd, 2010 | Author: Julie Rutherford | Filed under: Events | Tags: think aloud, usability, user research | No Comments »
Hi everyone!
The User Experience Group planning committee has a great night scheduled! We have some video examples of think aloud studies that we will be showing and we’ll discuss best practices that we’ve used when asking participants to think aloud in usability tests. Amy Gill, who is pursuing a Masters degree in Applied Computer Science at the University of Guelph, will also be sharing more information about her research about think aloud practices in usability testing. Some of us from our UX group volunteered as participants in Amy’s studies, so we know we’re in for a treat!
Please click here to register for this event and hope to see you there!
Thursday, June 24, 2010
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Accelerator Centre
Meeting Room #2
295 Hagey Blvd., Waterloo
[Map]