Próximo curso de diseño de interacción: toda la info
30/07/2010Acabo de publicar toda la información sobre el próximo curso para formar a diseñadores de interacción. Será la tercera edición del Programa Vostok.
Things we do, thoughts we have and things we like at Vostok Studio
Archive of articles classified as' "Interaction Design"
Back homeAcabo de publicar toda la información sobre el próximo curso para formar a diseñadores de interacción. Será la tercera edición del Programa Vostok.
Very sharp article by Alberto Romero (Denegro) about the use and misuse of available space in Gmail for iPad: Back to sidebars and popups.
It left me thinking about Planetaki and its iPad version, whether it should have a sidebar or not.
This is the kind of mess you get when you create an account at Eskup and first log in:
For those of you who don’t know, Eskup is a kind of social network, twitter-like, microblogging plattform which merges Elpais.com content with user generated microposts. Kind of like the dull answer to “how do we, newspaper, take advantage of social media?”
El Pais seems pretty excited about this. Their excitement is directly proportional to my skepticism. They’ve done a great deal of programming for this and they’ve taken risks, which is good. But they URGENTLY need to rework the design and functionality so the product is more understandable and easy to use. Otherwise it will be another missed atempt at redefining online journalism in Spain.
We recently noticed that some people miss filling a gift card when sending flowers through floresfrescas.com. We know they miss them because some users later complain about not having that option. This is the solution Mark Mackay came up with:
These are some of the principles we’ve applied here:
Here’s the full scene:
If we knew that not noticing the cards was too frequent we’d consider haing another step in the process just for filling the cards. But we are unsure about that and there is no easy way for knowing this (no, usability tests don’t work for that because users pay extra attention when observed). So instead of redesigning the process making it more effective and painful we went with this “user interface hack”.
We want to build the best list of design (interaction, information, industrial, product design and architecture) movies and documentaries of all times. Here’s the deal: write down in the comment section the name of a film or doc that’s somehow design related and, in return, we’ll give you a code to watch any movie in Filmin‘s (Spain’s best streaming service for indie film) catalog for free.

We also have a promo code for a premium account at Filmin (any movie, any time anywhere) which we’ll give to the person who makes the best list (it’s ok to repeat some movie suggested by someone else). Easy peasy japanesey. A neat gift for little effort.
These are the movies/docs we have so far:
Kitchen Stories (Bent Hamer, 2003)
The Fountainhead (King Vidor, 1949)
Tucker: The Man and his Dream (Francis Ford Coppola, 1988)
Helvetica (Gary Hustwit, 2007)
Powers of 10 (and other films by Ray y Charles Eames, 1977)
The RTVE series ‘Elogio de la luz‘, each episode covering an architect
The Belly of an Architect (Peter Greenaway, 1987)
Sketches of Frank Gehry (Sydney Pollack, 2005)
Play Time (Jacques Tati, 1967)
Full disclosure: We’ve done Filmin’s web redesign and we love it (the service, not the redesign. Well… both). We’ll go into details in a future post.
It all came to be with one of those ‘on the spur of the moment’ Twitter event kinda things. We ended up hosting a private reunion to talk about interaction design with some of the best senior designers out there and had loads of fun in the process. How cooler can it get?
Here’s video proof:
I love everytimezone.com. It’s a great example of how information visualisation and interactivity can solve a very complex problem. Check it out:

You may say “c’mon, that was solved a long tome ago” but common tools only give you the time difference. From that you can guess if it’s morning, afternoon, night… But you often feel confused wheter it’s “today or tomorrow or yesterday”. That’s exactly what everytimexone.com fixes.
I’m sure it would make a very popular iPad/iPhone app.
This is what happens when you put more effort on marketing than on design:
This post by Amit Gupta pretty much says everything about the issue here:
