Sample sketches exploring alternate ways to access site level commands in SharePoint 2010. (via Microsoft Office 2010 Engineering : UX Design Tools & Techniques)
Veronica and Sadie are on the gondola in Banff, AB
This is a great presentation, definately the best concise explanation I have seen.
A group of Microsoft researchers has built a kind of multitouch for the conventional keyboard… It allows a keyboard to accept pressure-sensitivity data, from which it can infer user intentions. - Chris Dannen for Fast Company
I really love how this looks like it can be a simple inexpensive way to have new gestural interfaces enhance the work and play we do today.
Watching this video is like staring at the incoming tsunami. I’m excited and also terrified by the fact that in my career I will not only be designing experiences for kids like this but his kids.
I took this photo’s URL from Flickr and pasted it into the SeaDragon input box and I was done. The picture is from the Diablo Lake Overlook.
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Vision Slides for a knowledge portal for a group of hospitals. - Design for Care -
Years ago I worked on an knowledge portal for a group of hospitals. These slides were the result of interviews with a number of group on what they need in a portal. These are fairly preliminary but it was a very useful exercise.
HealthCare Knowledge Portal Vision Slides View more documents from brycej.
I really think that default avartars should make you want to upload a picture -
The link is to the Gallery of default anonymity: A work in progress.
People on twitter are all buzzing about how $18M Being Spent to Redesign Recovery.gov Web Site and at first glance that does sound like an insane amount of money.
According to the GSA, Recovery.gov will be rebuilt over the course of five months for a total of $9,516,324. The Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board then has the option to exercise options that can take the contract through 4 more years for a total of $17,948,518.
While I am shocked by the $9.5m in the first five months I’m certainly not shocked by $8.4 million to manage and maintain a government site for four years. I have done enough government work to know that warrenty commitments, change requests, uptime guarentees and managing a client in a bureaucratic culture costs a lot of money.
Sunlight Labs hits the nail on the head when they say:
The real problem is transparency. The real problem is that while many are outraged at the cost, you can’t presume that the government isn’t spending its money wisely unless you know both what Government is paying and what they’re paying for. We don’t know what they’re paying for, yet.
I hope that this gets rectified soon and that the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board, along with Smartronix works with our community to make sure of three things:
- That people know what every dime of that $18MM is being spent on,
- That Smartronix works with the community to make the process of building Recovery.gov open and transparent, and
- That Smartronix works with the Sunlight Labs community to make the data published on Recovery.gov accessible and machine readable to developers.
That last point is a little self serving but I’m willing to let that slide.
My two cents on this whole thing is that facilitating this transparency should be mostly on the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board plate. The public servants should serve the public. This transparency also needs to apply to the processes and commitments of the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board as well as to the work of the vendor,Smartronix.
So let the people know what their government is doing in addition to letting them know how their tax money is being spent.
Youcalc - Custom analytics on live data from your SaaS systems -
This looks really interesting. I need to find the time to check this out.
Saw this on Whidbey Island yesterday. If we hadn’t just had lunch I so would have stopped.
I tried out TweetPsych. It is an interesting idea but I’m not sure what the results below based on my tweets mean. It is good to see twitter analysis that goes beyond managing followers.
Cognitive Content
Primordial, Conceptual and Emotional Content
TweetPsych uses two linguistic analysis algorithms (RID and LIWC) to build a psychological profile of a person based on the content of their tweets.
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