Having a good user experience is an important part of any technology.In the previous year UX was big right from product interfaces to the on boarding process right to the content which is available through the various digital platforms.
http://hitechbeacon.com/2018/01/04/top-ux-trends-in-2018/
Established in 2001 in the Netherlands, Translink operates as the connecting force behind the OV-chipkaart. One card used for accessing all sorts of public transportation, the OV-chipkaart is an easier and more secure way for people to travel. The OV-chipkaart also allows Dutch public transportation companies to make more efficient use of capacity, resources and staff.
https://mopinion.com/translink-provides-seamless-online-experience-with-customer-feedback/
Every year Loughborough Design School hold a ‘UXathon’ in collaboration with Deloitte Digital and the University of Hong Kong MBA business students. The aim of the event is for the design students at LDS to spend one day realising the concepts of the Honk Kong business students.
https://uxplanet.org/transparency-is-key-a63645ad1a13/
orget the nightmare of cropping your photos so they look good on Twitter. The platform is now using AI to always show the best parts of your photos.
Here is a great example of what AI and machine learning should really be about: bringing a solution to things that can ruin the user experience, like badly cropped images on Twitter.
https://wersm.com/twitter-is-using-ai-to-show-the-best-parts-of-your-photos/
The lure of machine learning isn’t always about big new features; often, what it does best are small tweaks that subtly improve user experience. So it is with Twitter’s use of neural networks to automatically crop picture previews to their most interesting part.
https://www.theverge.com/2018/1/25/16931632/twitter-machine-learning-auto-image-cropping/
Learn about core concepts in UX design: conducting user interviews, design thinking, interaction design, mobile UX design, usability, UX research, and many more! Claim your complimentary copy before the offer expires.
https://www.neowin.net/news/understand-the-basics-of-user-experience-design-with-this-limited-time-free-ebook/
This January the new user interface, Mopinion Raspberry, goes live. In this five-part series, we will ‘unmask’ various new components of the software one by one, components that are guaranteed to give you a smooth and lucid user experience. Unmasking Mopinion Raspberry Part 2 featured the new Feedback Form Builder, but this time we want to focus on another very important part of the platform, the Feedback Inbox.
http://mopinion.com/unmasking-mopinion-raspberry-part-3-the-feedback-inbox/
The rumors are true. The newest version of Mopinion’s software, known as Mopinion Raspberry, is set to go live in January 2020. With rigorous testing and refinement processes in full swing, we’d like to take these next few months to slowly introduce you to Mopinion Raspberry. In this five-part series, we will ‘unmask’ various new components of the software one by one; components that are guaranteed to give you a smooth and lucid user experience.
http://mopinion.com/unmasking-mopinion-raspberry-the-navigation/
User experience is often overlooked in website and app design and, indeed, the design of many things. How many times have you felt compelled to push a door only to find you need to pull it instead? While fire codes might dictate such design, it’s an example of user experience at work.
While taking a moment to figure out whether a door is push or pull sounds like a small thing, those types of irritants can add up online -- and cost your business customers.
https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/309161/
Researchers working on browser fingerprinting found themselves distracted by a much more serious privacy breach: analytical scripts siphoning off masses of user interactions.
Steven Englehardt (a PhD student at Princeton), Arvind Narayanan (a Princeton assistant professor) and Gunes Acar (KU Lueven), published their study at Freedom to Tinker last week. Their key finding is that session replay scripts are indiscriminate in what they scoop, user permission is absent, and there's evidence that the data isn't always handled securely.
Session replay is a popular user experience tool: it lets a publisher watch users navigating their site to work out why users leave a site and what needs improving.
https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/11/20/session_replay_exfiltration/