Designing for People Blog

Labels indicate problems with design

Labels indicate problems with design

Labels reveal imperfect mental models, and the sad collision of hope and harsh reality pic.twitter.com/DSGdfZS0Ho — John Lee (@Jdlee888) June 17, 2017

Airlines degrade service to entice upgrades

Airlines degrade service to entice upgrades

User-centered design done differently: “calculated misery” Degrade basic service to make people want to pay to escape it. https://t.co/CF6EDFzmV9 — John Lee (@Jdlee888) June 18, 2017 Similar idea behind airline lounges at airports: underinvest...

Adoption of good design

Adoption of good design

iPhone impact on the world in a graph: 0 to 1.2 B in 10 years. The power of designing for peoplehttps://t.co/YnRWjocLO6 pic.twitter.com/j14UhObobm — John Lee (@Jdlee888) June 21, 2017

Labels often indicate missing affordances

Labels often indicate missing affordances

Labels indicate missing affordances. Might work to train owners, but what about those renting cars? pic.twitter.com/oZW1IrnavD — John Lee (@Jdlee888) June 27, 2017

Displays are not just on the desktop computer

Displays are not just on the desktop computer

Super cool. Parking garage in Sydney using projectors to warn pedestrians of exiting car. Capturing attention when needed, otherwise nothing pic.twitter.com/QN5noka4N4 — 𝚁𝚊𝚏𝚊𝚎𝚕 𝙼 𝙱𝚊𝚝𝚒𝚜𝚝𝚊 (@RafMBatista) July 3, 2017