Posts Tagged ‘interaction design’


Changing thinking; changing practice

15 March 2009

I have been saying for a while now that 2009 is going to be a great year. Looking around the world at the state of the global economy; the precarious nature of financial markets and institutions; the number of jobs being shed; and an ongoing realisation that our approach to consumption, growth, sustainability and nature are being fundamentally rethought; it is hard to pick up on why I am so optimistic.

On the one hand, these critical challenges to our established way of life – and the aspirations of developing countries – are confronting. They force us to question the legitimacy of two generations of leadership beginning in the ’70s, supported by government deregulation and the rise of communication & information technologies.

But on the other hand, they present us with real opportunities to restructure our society around a new set of priorities, and driven by a philosophy of equity, fairness, sustainability, and stewardship. This is an exciting – if uncertain – time for those of us engaged in the business of designing products, services, organizations, industries or countries. Suddenly, we are faced with design challenges on a massive scale; challenges where traditional approaches to problem-solving cannot be relied upon to deliver real, significant, solutions.

The role of design in meeting these challenges is becoming more and more recognised in business circles, albeit in the guise of ‘innovation’. Whilst the label may be different, the underlying message is clear: linear, incremental approaches to problem solving will not work to meet the challenges facing us today – in business, at the national, or the global scale.

As this recognition has dawned within the business community it has coincided with reflection on my own part about what it is that I want to be doing in my career. And what, really, have I been doing over the past few years.

My work in UX has been centred on the design of digital systems for business – web sites; e-commerce systems; and web-based business applications being the core part of my work for a decade. This work started with a focus on process and flow; error handling; and business logic. Over time, the work that I was doing went from the specific to the strategic – identifying opportunities for improvement in the overall business of the client; the way the operated; the nature of the service offered.

As that transition too place in my work, there has been a similar shift in thinking as to what is most important and interesting to me. In terms of practice, the centre of my approach has also shifted, taking on an increased flavour of research and analysis and, in doing so, starting to take on characteristics of design practice. You can see some of that shift in evidence in the beginnings of the writing I’m doing for Johnny Holland.

For me, Johnny represents a conscious re-alignment of my thinking around UX and the disciplines that come together to deliver those experiences to people. Although I have, for many years, advocated for interaction design as a central consideration in (in my case) Web projects, mentally I was still entrenched in an IA-centric world view. Since 2006 my thinking has migrated away from that IA-centricity towards an IxD-centric view of UX. Johnny represents a tangible recognition of that progression.

In a few short days I’ll be boarding a plane and heading to Memphis, TN to attend the 10th IA Summit. It will likely be the only time I attend. So if you’re going to be at IAS, be sure to say ‘Hi’.

In 2010, if I am able to make it to the US for a conference, it will be for Interaction ‘10 run by the Interaction Design Association (IxDA). The conference, attendees, presentations, location and general community are a much closer reflection of who and what I am these days. And although I’m by no means located at the core of this community in terms of skills or practice, it is certainly where my head and heart are located when it comes to my own work. What I now recognise as my tribe.


What I want from an e-book reader…

26 July 2008

I buy a lot of books: paper books. Hardcover and paperback books. Books for work; books for learning; books for entertainment; books for escape. Today I spent $260 on books – 9 in total.

But I don’t own an e-book reader, although I love the idea of having my library of 400+ books available on one little device. And here’s why…

I’ll buy an e-book reader when:

  • The reader has wireless internet connectivity built-in
  • I can buy books directly from the reader; none of this business of downloading to a computer and syncing across. A little like buying music for my iPod Touch.
  • The text of the book is presented as text, not PDF; and not an image. I should be able to change font size and the typeface; copy words, sentences, paragraphs etc;
  • I can search the text of the book;
  • I can highlight a word and execute a search on Wikipedia or Google or Yahoo! or MSN;
  • I can visit the website that’s been created for the book;
  • I can publish my book library to a site, complete with reviews, comments etc and engage in a discussion with others about books that I’ve read, or thinking of reading. This might be as an application in Facebook, or something new.
  • I can annotate books and add tags
  • I can subscribe to online journals, magazines, and RSS feeds – including newspapers – and read them on the device.
  • The reader is a full colour screen.
  • I can ‘loan’ my copy of a book to a friend by transferring it to their reader. If I do that, it’s no longer on my reader. This could also act as a way to give people Gifts.
  • I can organize my books by Author, Genre, or title; and I can search across my entire collection for “books that contain Linden Avery” and those will be returned to me.

What would you like to see in an e-book reader? And what do you think of my ideas above?