Praise for A Project Guide to UX Design
Written by Russ on March 13, 2009 – 9:41 amI’m down in Austin, Texas, for SXSW and have finally had the chance to see copies of the book! Things are hectic and there’s more information overload and internet underload (seems all connections down here are pretty sluggish from the growing masses of people all trying to be connected at the same time–go figure!),
We’ve heard the books have started shipping and we’ve received some copies of our own, so we felt it was time to share some of the praise and feedback that we’ve received:
“If Russ Unger and Carolyn Chandler were magicians, the Alliance would be after them for revealing their best secrets. Fortunately for you, they’re not. Russ and Carolyn have collected up sage wisdom previously only known to the most experienced UX project leaders and codified it for all to see. Now you can learn the secrets necessary to running great user experience projects.”
Jared M. Spool, CEO and founding principal of User Interface Engineering
“Is there one book that can tell you everything you need to know about designing user experiences? No. Is there a book that get you most of the way there? There is now. Carolyn and Russ have laid a solid foundation for planning and managing design projects. This is an essential handbook for anyone mired in the competing methodologies, the endless meetings, and all the moving parts of user experience design.”
Dan Brown, author of Communicating Design
“This book is a fantastic introduction to how to design great products for real people. But it covers much more than just design—it also includes all the things around design: managing projects, working with people, and communicating ideas. A great all-rounder.”
Donna Spencer, author of “Card Sorting: Designing Usable Categories”
“This is a practical, accessible, and very human guide to a very human activity: working together with people to make great things for other people.”
Steve Portigal, Portigal Consulting
“If you’ve heard of Wil Wheaton the author, you understand why I hold Russ Unger in such high regard. Russ’s experience and guidance was fundamental to the construction and design of Monolith Press, and he’s been one of the most valuable collaborators I’ve ever worked with.”
Wil Wheaton, author of Dancing Barefoot, Just a Geek, and The Happiest Days of our Lives
Some of the kindest and most generous words from people we genuinely respect. We hope you find the book a useful and valuable addition to your UX bookshelf!
On top of all of this wonderful praise, I was able to pass along a copy to Austin Govella, co-author of Information Architecture: Blueprints for the Web, 2nd Edition, with Christina Wodtke. Later in the evening, Austin sent me one of the best, most succinct direct messages I’ve ever received on Twitter:
The book is great.
I don’t believe Austin’s one to throw praise around willy-nilly… and I’m completely flattered that I got that message. Thanks, Austin!
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I Love My Amazon Kindle. And I Love It On My iPhone.
Written by Russ on March 4, 2009 – 11:53 amWhen the first Amazon Kindle came out, I bought it. I actually had to wait a month or so because demand was so high, but when I got it in January of 2008, I was really…
Underwhelmed.
I loved the damn thing, but it’s industrial design was… meh. The edges where too harsh. It was bulky. The big-ass buttons were too big ass. Pages turned when I would rest the Kindle against my bag on the train and I’d lose my place.
It annoyed me.
But I loved feeding my reading habit and buying books on the train and just buying books to show off. Plus, it was pretty cool to have the Wall Street Journal ready for me every day when I was ready for it.
Except, of course, that Wall Street Journal would not allow me to have web access to the paper unless I paid for that online access, as well.
I sold that Kindle a few weeks back, even though I loved it so. To be honest, since I’ve been working on the book, my reading habit has dwindled severely. Now I have a whole bunch of these presentation things I need to be working on (and I am), but I also have some spare time to get back into reading, so I was pretty happy to jump to the front of the line and place an order for a new Kindle as a first generation owner.
I got it last week, and the improvements are unreal.
Okay, they’re real. But they’re (almost) all the right ones!
No longer do you have to push a funky key combination to force the sleep mode. Instead, you flip the switch at the top–easy! The buttons are smaller, and require a bit more impact and force (ie actual desire) to push, meaning you have substantially fewer accidental page turns! This, naturally, makes me happy.
The pages, well, they turn quicker. That makes me happy, too, except for the slight adjustment I’ve “learned” from when I push the page turn to when it turns… Ooops! There’s that nifty little “read the words to me” feature, but it’s more to show it off than anything else.
I love that I can email my Kindle account PDFs or Documents and they’ll convert it for a dime and then I can read it at my leisure. It’s annoying that it doesn’t keep images intact (I sent a PDF of The Book to it), but it’s nice to be able to read work, etc. documents NOT on the iPhone only.
In general, however, the industrial design rocks, the overall experience is greatly improved, the keyboard is better and the entire device just makes a lot more sense and seems about as right as it can be for an eReader, or whatever we’re calling them now.
The downsides that I currently see are:
No SD card for expansion of memory–but I never filled the last SD card, and Amazon will let you keep your digital books on their network, with the availability to pull them down whenever you want. Not much of an issue from where I sit.
I still can’t print or grab snippets of text, send it somewhere and print it. It’s minor, but it’s a pain in the butt to not be able to snag text, and article, etc. and print it off for reference.
This version did not come with a case like the previous version–I wasn’t a huge fan of the last case, but at least I had one and I didn’t pay extra for it. In return, the package was a lot less, so I guess there’s some tiny bit of the environment that got saved, but I still had to shell out a bunch of bucks to get a neoprene case, which in turn required more packaging and shipping, so I think that ecological argument just got tossed right out the window into the smoggy air. Just saying.
And it just got better…
Today, the Kindle iPhone application just came out, officially making Kindle hardware AND software, I think. The application is free, and like all the other iPhone applications: select it, install it, use it.
I found all of my books in a place called “Archives”. I grabbed the most recent book I’ve been reading and it downloaded it to my iPhone. In another tap, the book opened for me to read…
And this is where it got REALLY cool…
It opened up to the last page I read on my Kindle the day before.
No kidding!
While sitting in a doctor’s office this morning, I was flipping through pages–it was a thumb swipe from right-to-left–and I was able to exit the application and re-open to the same place. A “refresh”-like looking button is on the screen, so I tapped it and in a few moments it let me know that I was at the furthest-most read page on any of my devices.
Pretty freaking cool, really.
Even cooler…
I didn’t have to “register a device” or make any limited number of devices “authorized” to use it, which is a hard lesson that our pals at Apple should start to learn–especially for those of us with iPods, iPhones, AppleTVs and more than one computer.
Kindle: I’m a fan. Thanks for listening and improving. I hope the next changes are software changes so I don’t have to go through the sell-and-upgrade process again in a year.
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