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Learn fundamentals of graphic design. Graphic design is not UI design, but concepts from graphic design can improve an interface. Graphic design introduces design principles for the visual presentation of information, such as proximity, alignment, and small multiples. I recommend reading The non-designer's design book (Robin Williams) and Envisioning Information (Edward Tufte)Learn paper prototyping. The fastest way to iteratively test an interface before you write code. Different from sketching and usability testing. The definitive book here is Paper Prototyping (Carolyn Snyder). You can get a good DVD on this from the Nielsen Norman Group. Learn to sketch designs. Sketching is fast way to explore design options and find the right design, whereas usability testing is about getting the design right. Paper prototyping is fast, cheap, and effective during the early design stages. Much faster than coding a digital prototype. The key text here is Sketching User Experience: Getting the design right and the right design (Bill Buxton). Sketching is a particularly useful skill when working with IA/ID/UX designers. Your collaboration will be more effective. For a good primer on how and why designers sketch, watch the presentation How to be a UX team of one by Leah Buley from the 2008 IA Summit.Learn paper prototyping. The fastest way to iteratively test an interface before you write code. Different from sketching and usability testing. The definitive book here is Paper Prototyping (Carolyn Snyder). You can get a good DVD on this from the Nielsen Norman Group. Learn usability testing. Discount testing is easy and effective. But for many UIs, usability is hard to do well. You can learn the basics quickly, but good usability people are invaluable. If you want a book, the classic is The Handbook of Usability Testing (Jeffrey Rubin). It's older but offers thorough coverage of lab-based testing. The famous starter book is Don't Make Me Think (2nd Ed) (Steve Krug). I caution people about this one: Krug makes it sound easier than it is. But it is a good starting point. The user research books listed in the next point also cover this topic. And you can find piles about it online. Learn about interaction design. The main book here is The Essentials of Interaction Design (3rd) (Alan Cooper, et al). A good starter book is Designing for interaction (Dan Saffer). For more, visit the Interaction Design Association (IxDA) or attend the annual Interaction Design conference.Learn fundamentals of graphic design. Graphic design is not UI design, but concepts from graphic design can improve an interface. Graphic design introduces design principles for the visual presentation of information, such as proximity, alignment, and small multiples. I recommend reading The non-designer's design book (Robin Williams) and Envisioning Information (Edward Tufte)
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Coding is hard. Design is hard too. Few people do both well. Good UI designers rarely write code. That They may not even know how, yet they are still good designers. So why do good developers feel responsible for UI design? Here are some specific things you can learn. Don't try to learn everything. What follows is a rough curriculum for a degree on user experience design, information architecture, If you knew everything below you could call yourself an interaction design, etcdesigner or an information architect. I'd suggest starting Start with things towards near the top of the list. Focus on specific concepts and skills. Then move down and branch out. If you really like this stuff, consider it as a career path. Not all Many developers wind up as managersmove into managements, but UX design is another option.
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Get a degree. A graduate degree in HCI is one approach, but these programs are mostly about writing coding. If you want to learn about the design of digital artifacts and devices, then you want a graduate program that's not in CS. Some options include Interaction Design at Carnegie Mellon, the d-School at Stanford, the ITP program at NYU, and Information Architecture & Knowledge Management at Kent State (disclosure: I'm on faculty at Kent; we are seeing more and more people with CS degrees moving into UX design instead of management, which is interesting, because management is the traditional path for developers who want to move away from writing code while staying in their field). There are many more programs. Each has their own perspective, areas of emphasis, and technical expectations. Some come out of the arts and visual design, others out of library and information science, and some from CS. Most are hybrids, but every hybrid has deeper roots in one or more fields. If this interests you, look around and try to understand the differences between these programs. Some offer online courses and certificate programs in addition to full-fledged degrees.
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Coding is hard. Design is hard too. People rarely Few people do both well. Good UI designers rarely write code. They That may not even know how, yet they are good designers. So why do good developers feel responsible for UI design? A deep understanding of the machine. People in this group worry about code first, people second. They have deep technological knowledge and skill. We call them developers, programmers, engineers, and so onforth.This is the essential difference between these 2 groups--between groups—between developers and designers:
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UI design is hard for most developers, not some developers, because it's a separate skill from writing code. People who are good at UI design rarely write code. They may not even know how. Coding a UI and designing a UI require different skills and a different mindset. UI design is hard for most developers, not some developers, just as writing code is hard for most designers, not some designers. Coding is hard. Design is hard too. People rarely do both well. For the most part, Good UI designers don't rarely write code. They may not even know how. So why do good developers feel responsible for UI design? Recognize design as a separate skill. Coding and design are separate but related. UI design is not a subset of coding. It requires a different mindset, knowledge base, and skill group. There are people out there who focus on UI design.Learn about design. Read some booksAt least a little bit. Try to learn a few of the design concepts and techniques from the long list below. If you are more ambitious, follow read some blogsbooks, attend conferencesa conference, take a class, get a degree. There are lot of ways to learn about design. Joel Spolky's book on UI design is a good primer for developers, but there is there's a world of things lot more to learn beyond this it and that's where designers come into thisthe picture.Work with designers. Good designers, if you can. People who do this work go by various titles. Today, the most common titles are User Experience Designer (UXD), Information Architect (IA), Interaction Designer(ID), and Usability Engineer. They think about design as much as you think about code. You can learn a lot from them, and they from you. Work with them however you can. Find people with these skills in your company. Maybe you need to hire someone. Or go to some conferences, attend webinars, and spend time in the UXD/IA/ID world.Some Here are some specific steps things you might take:can learn. Don't try to learn everything. What follows is a rough curriculum for a degree on user experience design, information architecture, interaction design, etc. I'd suggest starting with things towards the top of the list. Focus on specific concepts and skills. Then move down and branch out. If you really like this stuff, consider it as a career path. Not all developers wind up as managers. Learn fundamental design concepts. You should know about affordances, visibility, feedback, mappings, Fitt's law, poka-yokes, and more. I recommend reading The Design of Everyday Things (Don Norman) and Universal Principles of Design (Lidwell, Holden, & Butler)Learn about user experience. This is becoming the umbrella term for the human-centered design of web sites, applications, and any other digital artifact. The classic primer here is The elements of User Experience (Jesse James Garrett). You can get an overview and the first few chapters from the author's site.Learn paper prototyping. The fastest way to iteratively test an interface before you write code. Different from sketching and usability testing. The definitive book here is Paper Prototyping (Carolyn Snyder). You can get a good DVD on this from the Nielsen Norman Group. Learn to sketch designs. Sketching is fast way to explore design options and find the right design, whereas usability testing is about getting the design right. Paper prototyping is fast, cheap, and effective during the early design stages. Much faster than coding a digital prototype. The key text here is Sketching User Experience: Getting the design right and the right design (Bill Buxton). Sketching is a particularly useful skill when working with IA/ID/UX designers. Your collaboration will be more effective. For a good primer on how and why designers sketch, watch the presentation How to be a UX team of one by Leah Buley from the 2008 IA Summit.Learn paper prototyping. The fastest way to iteratively test an interface before you write code. Different from sketching and usability testing. The definitive book here is Paper Prototyping (Carolyn Snyder).You can get a good DVD on this from the Nielsen Norman Group. Learn usability testing. Discount testing is easy and effective. But for many UIs, usability is hard to do well. You can learn the basics quickly, but good usability people are invaluable. If you want a book, the classic is The Handbook of Usability Testing (Jeffrey Rubin). It's older but offers thorough coverage of lab-based testing. The famous starter book is Don't Make Me Think (2nd Ed) (Steve Krug). I caution people about this one: Krug makes it sound easier than it is. But it is a good starting point. The user research books listed in the next point also cover this topic. And you can find piles about it online. Learn about information architecture. The main book here is Information Architecture for the World Wide Web (3rd) (Louis Rosenfeld & Peter Morville). A good starter book is Information Architecture: Blueprints for the Web (Christina Wodtke). For more, visit the Information Architecture Institute or attend the annual Information Architecture Summit.Learn about interaction design. The main book here is The Essentials of Interaction Design (3rd) (Alan Cooper, et al). A good starter book is Designing for interaction (Dan Saffer). For more, visit the Interaction Design Association (IxDA) or attend the annual Interaction Design conference.Learn to do field research. Watching people in the lab under artificial conditions helps (ie: usability), but there is nothing like watching people use your code in context: their home, their office, or wherever they use it. Goes by various names, including ethnography, field studies, and contextual inquiry. Here is a good primer on field research. Two of the better known books here are Rapid Contextual Design (Karen Holtzblatt et al) and User and task analysis for interface design (Hackos & Redish).Learn about information architecture. The main book here is Information Architecture for the World Wide Web (3rd) (Louis Rosenfeld & Peter Morville). A good starter book is Information Architecture: Blueprints for the Web (Christina Wodtke). For more, visit the Information Architecture Institute or attend the annual Information Architecture Summit.Learn about interaction design. The main book here is The Essentials of Interaction Design (3rd) (Alan Cooper, et al). A good starter book is Designing for interaction (Dan Saffer). For more, visit the Interaction Design Association (IxDA) or attend the annual Interaction Design conference.
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Learn about design. Read some books, follow some blogs, attend conferences, take a class, get a degree. There are lot of ways to learn about design. Joel Spolky's book on UI design is a good primer, but there is a world of things to learn beyond this and that's where designers come into this.Work with designers. Good designers, if you can. People who do this work go by various titles. The Today, the most common titles are User Experience Designer (UXD), Information Architect (IA), Interaction Designer(ID), and Usability Engineer. They think about design as much as you think about code. You can learn a lot from them, and they from you. Work with them however you can. Find people with these skills in your company. Maybe you need to someone. Or go to some conferences, attend webinars, and spend time in the UXD/IA/ID world.
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Consider To the reverse question: why is UI design so hard for most developers? Try asking the inverse question: Design Coding is hard. Coding Design is hard too. People who rarely do both wellare rare. For the most part, UI designers don't write code. So why do developers feel responsible for UI design?
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A deep understanding of the machine. These are the People in this group worry about code first, people second. They have deep technological knowledge and skill. We call them developers, programmers, engineers, and anyone else with deep technical knowledge and skillsso on.A deep understanding of people and design: These are the user experience designers, information architects, interaction designers, usability engineersPeople in this group worry about people first, and anyone else with code second. They have deep knowledge of how people interact with information, computers, and the world around them. If your job is about gory technical details you have to worry about code more than about people. If your job is about designing the We call them user experience you have to worry more about people than about codedesigners, information architects, interaction designers, usability engineers, and so forth. So there an This is the essential difference between these 2 groups--between developers and designers:
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Learn fundamentals of graphic design. Graphic/visual Graphic design is not UI design, but concepts from graphic design can improve an interface. Graphic design introduces specific design principles for the visual presentation of information, such as proximity, alignment, and small multiples. I recommend reading The non-designer's design book (Robin Williams) and Envisioning Information (Edward Tufte)Learn to sketch designs. Sketching is fast way to explore design options and get find the right design, whereas usability testing is about getting the design right. Paper prototyping is fast, cheap, and effective during the early design stages. Much faster than building prototypescoding a digital prototype. I recommend reading The key text here is Sketching User Experience: Getting the design right and the right design (Bill Buxton). Sketching is a particularly useful skill when working with UI IA/ID/UX designers. Your collaboration will be more effective. For a good primer on how and why designers sketch, watch the presentation How to be a UX team of one by Leah Buley from the 2008 IA Summit.Thoughts on why Why UI design is hard
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Learn to do field research. Watching people in the lab under artificial conditions helps (ie: usability), but there is nothing like watching people use your code in context: their home, their office, or wherever they use it. Goes by various names, including ethnography, field studies, and contextual inquiry. Here is a good primer on field research. Two of the better known books here are Rapid Contextual Design (Karen Holtzblatt et al) and User and task analysis for interface design (Hackos & Redish).Get a degree. A graduate degree in HCI is one approach, but these programs are mostly about writing coding. If you want to learn about the design of digital artifacts and devices, then you want a graduate program that's not in CS. Some options include Interaction Design at Carnegie Mellon, the d-School at Stanford, the ITP program at NYU, and Information Architecture & Knowledge Management at Kent State (disclosure: I'm on faculty at Kent; we are seeing more and more people with CS degrees moving into UX design instead of management)management, which is interesting, because management is the traditional path for developers who want to move away from writing code while staying in their field). There are many more programs Each has their own perspective, areas of emphasis, and technical expectations. If this interests you, look around. Some offer online courses and certificate programs in addition to full-fledged degrees.
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Knowing more about UI design will make you a better developer, but that doesn't mean you should be responsible for UI design. The reverse is true for designers: knowing about writing how to write code will make them better designers, but that doesn't mean they should be responsible for coding the UI.
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Learn about user experience. This is becoming the umbrella term for the human-centered design of web sites, applications, and any other digital artifact. The classic primer here is The elements of User Experience (Jesse James Garrett).Learn fundamentals of graphic design. Graphic/visual design introduces specific design principles for the visual presentation of information, such as proximity, alignment, and small multiples. I recommend reading The non-designer's design book (Robin Williams) and Envisioning Information (Edward Tufte)Learn to sketch designs. Sketching is fast way to explore design options and get the design right. Much faster than building prototypes. I recommend reading Sketching User Experience (Bill Buxton). Sketching is a particularly useful when working with UI designers. Your collaboration will be more effective. For a good primer on how and why designers sketch, watch the presentation How to be a UX team of one by Leah Buley from the 2008 IA Summit.Learn usability testing. Discount testing is easy and effective. But for many UIs, usability is hard to do well. You can learn the basics quickly, but good usability people are invaluable. If you want a book, the classic is The Handbook of Usability Testing (Rubin). Jeffrey Rubin). It's older but offers thorough coverage of lab-based testing. The famous starter book is Don't Make Me Think (Krug; 2nd ed)Ed) (Steve Krug). I caution people about this one: Krug makes it sound easier than it is. But it is a good starting point. The user research books listed in the next point also cover this topic. And you can find piles about it online. Learn to do field research. Watching people in the lab under artificial conditions helps (ie: usability), but there is nothing like watching people use your code in context: their home, their office, or wherever they use it. Goes by various names, including ethnography, field studies, and contextual inquiry. Here is a good primer on field research. Learn about information architecture. The main book here is Information Architecture for the World Wide Web (3rd) (Louis Rosenfeld & Morville, 3rd Ed)Peter Morville). A good starter book is Information Architecture: Blueprints for the Web (Christina Wodtke). For more, visit the Information Architecture Institute or attend the annual Information Architecture Summit.Learn about interaction design. The main book here is The Essentials of Interaction Design (3rd) (Alan Cooper, et al; 3rd ed)). A good starter book is Designing for interaction (Dan Saffer). For more, visit the Interaction Design Association (IxDA) or attend the annual Interaction Design conference.
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Learn fundamental design concepts. You should know about affordances, visibility, feedback, mappings, proximity, Fitt's law, and more. I recommend reading The Design of Everyday Things (Norman), Don Norman) and Universal Principles of Design (Lidwell, Holden, & Butler)Butler)Learn fundamentals of graphic design. Graphic/visual design introduces specific design principles for the visual presentation of information, such as proximity, alignment, and small multiples. I recommend reading The non-designer's design book (Williams).Robin Williams) and Envisioning Information (Edward Tufte)Learn paper prototyping. The fastest way to iteratively test an interface before you write code. Different from sketching and usability testing. The definitive book here is Paper Prototyping (Snyder). Carolyn Snyder). You can get a good DVD on this from the Nielsen Norman Group. Learn to do user research. Where usability tests an interface, user research tries to model users and their tasks through personas, scenarios, user journeys, and other documents. It's about understanding users and what they do, then using that to inform the design instead of guessing. Some techniques are interviews, surveys, diary studies, and cart sorting. Good books on this are Observing the User Experience (Kuniavksy) Mike Kuniavsky) and Understanding Your Users (Courage & Baxter)Use UI pattern libraries. There are patterns for interfaces. For web sites, I recommend The Design of Sites, 2nd ed (Van Duyne, et al; 2nd ed) is a pattern library book for web sitesand Homepage usability: 50 websites deconstructed (Jakob Nielsen & Marie Tahir). For desktop applications I recommend Designing interfaces (Jennifer Tidwell)is for applications. Online you should check Welie pattern library and UI patterns.
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Designers make people love it. They figure out how to interact with it, how it should look, and how it should feel. They design the experience of using the application, the web site, the device. Their highest priority is making you fall in love with what developers make. This is what is meant by user experience, and it's not the same as brand experience.
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UI design is hard for most developers, not some developers, because it's a separate skill from writing code. People who are good at UI design rarely write code. They may not even now know how. Work with good UI designers. Good designers, if you can. People who do this work go by various titles. The most common are User Experience Designer , (UXD), Information Architect , (IA), Interaction DesignerDesigner(ID), and Usability Engineer. They think about design just as much as you think about code. You can learn a lot from them, and they from you. Work with them however you can. Find people with these skills in your company. Maybe you need to hire someonewith this expertise. Or go to some conferences, attend webinars, and spend time in the UXD/IA/ID world.Learn fundamental design concepts. You should know about affordances, visibility, feedback, mappings, proximity, etcFitt's law, and more. I recommend reading The Design of Everyday Things (Norman), Universal Principles of Design (Lidwell, Holden, & Butler), and The non-designer's design book (Williams).Learn usability testing. Discount testing is easy and effective. But for many UIs, usability is hard to do well. You can learn the basics quickly, but good usability people are invaluable. If you want a book, the classic is The Handbook of Usability Testing (Rubin). It's older but offers thorough coverage of lab-based testing. The famous starter book is Don't Make Me Think (Krug; 2nd ed). I caution people about this one: it Krug makes it all look much sound easier than it really is. But it is a good starting point. The user research books listed in the next point also cover this topic. And you can find piles about it online.
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UI design is hard for most developers, not some developers, because it's a separate skill from writing code. People who are good at UI design rarely write code. They may not even now how. Consider the reverse question:" why is programming so hard for most UI designers?" This Design is a weird question because hard. Coding is hard. People who do both well are rare. For the most part, UI designers don't write code. So why do developers feel responsible for UI design? Knowing more about UI design will make you a better developer, but that doesn't mean you should be responsible for UI design. The reverse is true for designers: knowing about writing code will make them better designers, but that doesn't mean they should be responsible for coding the UI. How to get better at UI designFor developers wanting to get better at UI design I have 3 basic pieces of advice: Some specific steps you might take, in rough order of likely value: Learn to sketch designs. Sketching is fast way to explore design options and get the design right. Much faster than building prototypes. I recommend reading Sketching User Experience (Bill Buxton). Sketching is a particularly useful when working with UI designers. Your collaboration will be more effective.
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Some specific steps you might take, in rough order of likely value: Learn usability testing. Discount testing is easy and effective. But for many UIs, usability is hard to do well. Good You can learn the basics quickly, but good usability people are worth invaluable. If you want a book, the classic is The Handbook of Usability Testing (Rubin). It's older but offers thorough coverage of lab-based testing. The famous starter book is Don't Make Me Think (Krug; 2nd ed). I caution people about this one: it makes it all look much easier than it really is. The user research books listed in the next point also cover this topic. And you can find piles about it online. Learn to do user research. Where usability tests an interface, user research tries to model users and their tasks through personas, scenarios, user journeys, and moreother documents. Basic It's about understanding users and what they do, then using that to inform the design instead of guessing. Some techniques are interviews, surveys, diary studies, contextual inquiryand cart sorting. Good books on this are Observing the User Experience (Kuniavksy) and Understanding Your Users (Courage & Baxter)Learn to do field research. Watching people in the lab under artificial conditions helps (ie: usability), but there is nothing like watching people use your code in context: their home, their office, or wherever they use it. Goes by various names, including ethnography, field studies, and contextual inquiry. Here is a good primer on field researchLearn about information architecture. The main book here is Information Architecture for the World Wide Web (Rosenfeld & Morville, 3rd Ed). A good starter book is Information Architecture: Blueprints for the Web (Christina Wodtke)Wodtke). For more, visit the Information Architecture Institute or attend the annual Information Architecture Summit.Learn about interaction design. The main book here is The Essentials of Interaction Design (Alan Cooper, et al; 3rd ed). A good starter book is Designing for interaction (Dan Saffer). For more, visit the Interaction Design Association (IxDA) or attend the annual Interaction Design conference.Read UX design web sites. Some of the big ones are Boxes & Arrows, UX Mag, UX Matters, and Digital Web magazine.Get a degree. A graduate degree in HCI is one approach. This will focuse more on , but these programs are mostly about writing coding. If you want to learn about the design of digital artifacts and devices, then you want a graduate program that's not in CS. Some options include Interaction Design at Carnegie Mellon, the d-School at Stanford, the ITP program at NYU, and Information Architecture & Knowledge Management at Kent State (disclosure: I'm on faculty at Kent)Kent; we are seeing more and more people with CS degrees moving into design instead of management). There are many more programs Each has their own perspective, areas of emphasis, and technical expectations. If this interests you, look around. Some offer online courses and certificate programs in addition to full-fledged degrees.
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Strategies for designing How to get better UIsMy at UI design I have 3 basic pieces of adviceis: Learn about design. Read some books, follow some blogs, attend conferences, take a class, get a degree. There are lot of ways to thislearn about design.Work with good UI designers. People who do this work go by various titles. The most common are User Experience Designer, Information Architect, Interaction Designer, and Usability Engineer. You They think about code and they design just as you think about designcode. You will can learn a lot from them, and they from you. Work with them however you can. Maybe you need to hire someone with this expertise.Learn to sketch designs. Sketching is fast way to explore design options and get the design right. Much faster than building prototypes. I recommend reading Sketching User Experience (Bill Buxton).Learn paper prototyping. The fastest way to iteratively test an interface before you write code. Different from sketching and usability testing. The definitive book here is Paper Prototyping (Snyder). You can get a good DVD on this from the Nielsen Norman Group. Do Learn usability testing. Discount testing is easy and effective. But for many UIs, usability is hard to do difficultwell. Good usability people are worth it. Read Learn to do user research. Where usability tests an interface, user research tries to model users and their tasks through personas, scenarios, user journeys, and more. Basic techniques are interviews, surveys, diary studies, contextual inquiry. Good books on this are Observing the User Experience (Kuniavksy) and Understanding Your Users (Courage & Baxter)Learn about information architecture. The main book here is Information Architecture for the World Wide Web (Rosenfeld & Morville, 3rd Ed). A good starter book is Information Architecture: Blueprints for the Web (Christina Wodtke)Use UI pattern libraries. Yes, there There are patterns for interfaces. The Design of Sites (Van Duyne, et al; 2nd ed) is a pattern library book for web sites. Designing interfaces (Tidwell) is for applications. Online you should check Welie pattern library and UI patterns.Attend a UX design conferenceconferences. Some good annual conferences are: Information Architecture Summit, Interaction '09 (IxDA), User Interface, and UX week.Attend a workshop or webinar. You can take workshops, webinars, and online courses. This is far from a comprehensive list, but you might try the UIE virtual seminars, Adaptive Path virtual seminars, and UX webinars from Rosenfeld Media.Get a degree. A graduate degree in HCI is one approach. This will focuse more on coding. If you want to learn about design, then you want a graduate program that's not in CS. Some options include Interaction Design at Carnegie Mellon, the d-School at Stanford, the ITP program at NYU, and Information Architecture & Knowledge Management at Kent State (disclosure: I'm on faculty at Kent). There are many more.
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Strategies for designing better UIsMy basic advice is: Recognize design as a separate skill. Coding and design are separate but related. UI design is not a subset of coding. It requires a different mindset, knowledge base, and skill group.Learn about design. Read some books, follow some blogs, attend conferences, take a class, get a degree. There are lot of ways to this.Work with good UI designers. People who do this work go by various titles. The most common are User Experience Designer, Information Architect, Interaction Designer, and Usability Engineer. You think about code and they think about design. You will learn a lot from them, and they from you.Some specific steps you might take: Learn fundamental design concepts. You should know about affordances, visibility, feedback, mappings, proximity, etc. I recommend reading The Design of Everyday Things (Norman), Universal Principles of Design (Lidwell, Holden, & Butler), and The non-designer's design book (Williams).Learn to sketch designs. Sketching is fast way to explore design options and get the design right. Much faster than building prototypes. I recommend reading Sketching User Experience (Bill Buxton)Learn paper prototyping. The fastest way to iteratively test an interface before you write code. The definitive book here is Paper Prototyping (Snyder). You can get a good DVD on this from the Nielsen Norman Group. Do usability testing. Discount testing is easy and effective. But usability is hard to do difficult. Good usability people are worth it.Read about information architecture. The main book here is Information Architecture for the World Wide Web (Rosenfeld & Morville, 3rd Ed). A good starter book is Information Architecture: Blueprints for the Web (Christina Wodtke)Learn about interaction design. The main book here is The Essentials of Interaction Design (Alan Cooper, et al; 3rd ed). A good starter book is Designing for interaction (Dan Saffer). Use UI pattern libraries. Yes, there are patterns for interfaces. The Design of Sites (Van Duyne, et al; 2nd ed) is a pattern library book for web sites. Designing interfaces (Tidwell) is for applications. Online you should check Welie pattern library and UI patterns.Attend a UX design conference. Some good annual conferences are: Information Architecture Summit, Interaction '09 (IxDA), User Interface, and UX week.Thoughts on why UI design is hard
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Why is UI design so hard for some developers?
It is hard for most developers. This should , not be surprisingsome developers.
Consider the reverse question: "why is programming so hard for most UI designers?" To a developer this This is a weird question . because UI designers don't write code. So why do developers feel responsible for UI designUIs?
Good UI design is hard because it involves 2 vastly different skills:
- A deep understanding of the machine. These are the developers, programmers, engineers, and anyone else with deep technical knowledge and skills.
- A deep understanding of people and design: These are the user experience designers, information architects, interaction designers, usability engineers, and anyone else with deep knowledge of how people interact with information, computers, and the world around them.
If your job is about gory technical details you have to worry about code more than about people.
If your job is about designing the user experience you have to worry more about people than about code.
So there an essential difference between developers and designers:
- Developers make it work. They implement the functionality on your TiVo, your iPhone, your favorite website, etc. They make sure it actually does what it is supposed to do. Their highest priority is making it work.
- Designers make people love it. They figure out how to interact with it, how it should look, and how it should feel. They design the experience of using the application, the web site, the device. Their highest priority is making you fall in love with what developers make.
Programming
Moreover, programming and design require different mindsets, not just different knowledge and different skills.
Good UI design requires both mindsets, both knowledge bases, both skill groups. They each take And it takes years to master either one.
Developers should expect to find UI design hard, just as UI designers should expect to find writing code hard.
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Why is UI design so hard for some developers?
It is hard for most developers. This should not be surprising.
Consider the reverse question: "why is programming so hard for most UI designers?" To a developer this is a weird question. UI designers don't write code. So why do developers
design UIs?
Good UI design is hard because involves 2 vastly different skills:
- A deep understanding of the machine. These are the developers, programmers, engineers, and anyone else with deep technical knowledge and skills.
- A deep understanding of people and design: These are the user experience designers, information architects, interaction designers, usability engineers, and anyone else with deep knowledge of how people interact with information, computers, and the world around them.
If your job is about gory technical details you have to worry about code more than about people.
If your job is about designing the user experience you have to worry more about people than about code.
So there an essential difference between developers and designers:
- Developers make it work. They implement the functionality on your TiVo, your iPhone, your favorite website, etc. They make sure it actually does what it is supposed to do. Their highest priority is making it work.
- Designers make people love it. They figure out how to interact with it, how it should look, and how it should feel. They design the experience of using the application, the web site, the device. Their highest priority is making you fall in love with what the programmers developers make.
Programming and design require different mindsets, not just different knowledge and different skills.
If your job is about gory technical details you are paid to worry about code more than to worry about people.
If your job is about user experience you are paid to worry more about people than to worry about code.
Good UI design requires both mindsets, both knowledge bases, both skill groups. They each take years to master.
Developers should expect to find UI design hard, just as UI designers should expect to find writing code hard.
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Why is UI design so hard for some developers?
It is hard for most developers. This should not be surprising.
Consider the reverse question: "why is programming so hard for most UI designers?" To a developer this is a weird question. UI designers don't write code. So why do developers
design UIs?
Good UI design is hard because involves 2 vastly different skills:
- A deep understanding of the machine. These are the developers, programmers, engineers, and anyone else with deep technical knowledge and skills.
- A deep understanding of people and design: These are the user experience designers, information architects, interaction designers, usability engineers, and anyone else with deep knowledge of how people interact with information, computers, and the world around them.
So there an essential difference between developers and designers:
- Developers make it work. They implement the functionality on your TiVo, your iPhone, your favorite website, etc. They make sure it actually does what it is supposed to do. Their highest priority is making it work.
- Designers make people love it. They figure out how to interact with it, how it should look, and how it should feel. They design the experience of using the application, the web site, the device. Their highest priority is making you fall in love with what the programmers make.
Programming and design require different mindsets, not just different knowledge and different skills.
If your job is about gory technical details you are paid to worry about code more than to worry about people.
If your job is about user experience you are paid to worry more about people than to worry about code.
Good UI design requires both mindsets, both knowledge bases, both skill groups. They each take years to master.
Developers should expect to find UI design hard, just as UI designers should expect to find writing code hard.
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Post Made Community Wiki by Community♦
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