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UIEtips: Web Anatomy – Introducing Interaction Design Frameworks

One of the big changes in web application development over the last year is its growth. No longer the domain of simple, little functions that serve a single purpose, web-based applications are now often part of larger, enterprise-wide development initiatives. One of the challenges of being part of a bigger solution is the need to scale the development process. And in that, we’ve seen changes...
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SpoolCast: Web Form Design with Luke Wroblewski

Duration: 36m | 20 MB Recorded: January, 2009 Brian Christiansen, UIE Podcast Producer [ Subscribe to our podcast via ←This link will launch the iTunes application.] [ Subscribe with other podcast applications.] [ Direct Link to MP3 File ] When I tell people that one of our most popular conference sessions of all-time is about Web Form Design, people think I’m pulling their leg. Those people,...
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$300 Million Button Research Featured on FastCompany.com

We don’t live for press clippings, like some folk do. We just do our best to provide good, quality content to you, our audience, figuring that those people who need to know about us will find us. So, it’s a nice fifteen minutes of fame when we get picked up by the popular press, in this case, Fast Company magazine: Cliff Kuang did a nice job describing the research I described in my $300...
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Userability Podcast #1: Exploring More Design Alternatives

Duration: 12m 30s | 6.7 MB Recorded: January, 2009 Brian Christiansen, UIE Podcast Producer [ Subscribe to our podcast via ←This link will launch the iTunes application.] [ Subscribe with other podcast applications.] [ Direct Link to MP3 File ] Friends, I’d like to introduce you to our newest creation, the Userability Podcast. No, I didn’t mistype that. As we’ve mentioned previously,...
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UIEtips: Previous and Next Actions in Web Forms

Most online design requires the designer to focus on two separate but equal elements. The content of the design and the chrome that supports it. (Do you think I’ve watched too much Law and Order over the years?) Take a multi-step dialog sequence, such as, say, signing up for a new account. Each step will have the content — the fields the user will fill in, including their name, address,...
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