Alt+Tabs of an Open Mind

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Avant Garde.. whatevr

Yahoo India wanted a concept on a web2.0 mailbox for hiring new UX designers. They came up with a fancy name for it too (forgot what it was..) This is what I came up with-

A web2.0 mailbox

Web2.0 is fresh market opportunities, mashups, virtual communities with intense self-expression, old /new technology with a desktop feel.
E-mail is the most popular activity on the internet. Then search and messaging follow. Both of these are gathering information for storing or sharing. Inbox is mostly used as newsgatherer, notifier..

Personal Features

1 Mail Yourself (kinda like a cardboard box for yourself to store files)- if you want people to actually use 2 GB
2 Favorite links, videos and other media should also be kept in one’s mailbox – most of the fwds are forgotten and lost in the unbrowsable column of cryptic subject lines (“you gotta see this !!!!!!”) attachment should have a preview
> embedded media viewer
> tagging and storage of other content in your mailbox
> sending audio messages – not as attachments but with like podcast conversations – there are somethings that cannot be written, only said – if everyone can voicechat, asynchronous voice-chat will also be fun. offline messaging

Social Features

1 Improve your personal and oldest social network – your address book :: your contacts are vital to you. there is a display of your “most frequently mailed” people, “less frequently mailed” people and “rarely mailed” people. you can be prompted to mail the less frequent ones. tag view for friends – all for encouragement to increase mail frequency. the idea is seeing someone whom you havent mailed in years – ok months.

2 Tag your contacts too – no more selecting which mail to fwd to which of your friends. tag friends according to their interests (techies, musicians). People with more than two tags will be sent mail once
> if there are lots of addresses in cc, that means the sender has no objection if others see to whom all he is sending the mail
> the mailing lists that you are part of

Gmail is my benchmark. Of course the ideas are at a nascent stage

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Filed under: Ideas

‘Good for the Soul’

With iPod’s fifth birthday around the corner, Steve Jobs discusses the MP3 player’s design, the cool factor and the impact on how we listen to music.

By Steven Levy

Oct. 14, 2006 – Oct. 23 marks the fifth anniversary of Apple’s iPod. CEO Steve Jobs reflected with NEWSWEEK’s Steven Levy (author of “The Perfect Thing,” a book about the iPod out this month) about the past, present and future of the device that changed Apple—and the world.

NEWSWEEK: During the iPod’s development process did you get a sense of how big it would become?
Steve Jobs: The way you can tell that you’re onto something interesting is if everybody who knows about the project wants one themselves, if they can’t wait to go out and open up their own wallets to buy one. That was clearly the case with the iPod. Everybody on the team wanted one.

Other companies had already tried to make a hard disk drive music player. Why did Apple get it right?
We had the hardware expertise, the industrial design expertise and the software expertise, including iTunes. One of the biggest insights we have was that we decided not to try to manage your music library on the iPod, but to manage it in iTunes. Other companies tried to do everything on the device itself and made it so complicated that it was useless.

What was the design lesson of the iPod?
Look at the design of a lot of consumer products—they’re really complicated surfaces. We tried make something much more holistic and simple. When you first start off trying to solve a problem, the first solutions you come up with are very complex, and most people stop there. But if you keep going, and live with the problem and peel more layers of the onion off, you can oftentimes arrive at some very elegant and simple solutions. Most people just don’t put in the time or energy to get there. We believe that customers are smart, and want objects which are well thought through.

Some people say that iPod might lose its cache because it’s too popular—how can it be cool when Dick Cheney and Queen Elizabeth have one?
That’s like saying you don’t want to kiss your lover’s lips because everyone has lips. It doesn’t make any sense. We don’t strive to appear cool. We just try to make the best products we can. And if they are cool, well, that’s great.

What products, maybe outside technology, do you consider cool?
I like things that do the job and kind of disappear into my life. Like Levis. They just kind of get faded and disappear, and you don’t think about it much. If you look, you appreciate the design, but you feel something from them, too. A lot of quality is communicated through a feeling that people have. They don’t understand exactly why, but they know that a lot of care and love was put into the designing of the product.

Let’s talk about the iTunes store. How did you get the record labels, which had been resisting digital music, to sign up?
It was a process over 18 months. We got to know these folks and we made a series of predictions that a lot of things they were trying would fail. Then they went and tried them, and they all failed, for the reasons that we had predicted. We kept coming back to visit them every month or two, and they started to believe that we might actually have some insight into this, and our credibility grew with them to the point where they were willing to take a chance with us. Now, remember, it was initially just on the Mac, so one of the arguments that we used was, “If we’re completely wrong and you completely screw up the entire music market for Mac owners, the sandbox is small enough that you really won’t damage the overall music industry very much.” That was one instance where Macintosh’s [small] market share helped us. Then about six months later we were able to successfully persuade them to take down the barriers and let us move it out to the whole market.

Now people at some labels think that iTunes, with its dominant market share has too much power.
We’ve never once gone to them and asked them to lower their prices.

No, but you’ve asked them not to raise their prices, when some of them wanted to.
Our core initial strategy on the store was that if you want to stop piracy, the way to stop it is by competing with it, by offering a better product at a fair price. In essence, we would make a deal with people. If they would pay a fair price, we would give them a better product and they would stop being pirates. And it worked. If we go back now and we raise prices—this is what we told the record companies last year—we will be violating that implicit deal. Many [users] will say, “I knew it all along that the music companies were gonna screw me, and now they’re screwing me.” And they would never buy anything from iTunes again.

Do you think that it’s fair to the customer that the songs they buy from Apple will only work on iTunes and the iPod?
Well, they knew that all along.

At one point you were saying, “When our customers demand it, that’s when we’ll consider interoperability.”
Nobody’s ever demanded it. People know up front that when they buy music from the iTunes music store it plays on iPods, and so we’re not trying to hide anything there.

Microsoft has announced its new iPod competitor, Zune. It says that this device is all about building communities. Are you worried?
In a word, no. I’ve seen the demonstrations on the Internet about how you can find another person using a Zune and give them a song they can play three times. It takes forever. By the time you’ve gone through all that, the girl’s got up and left! You’re much better off to take one of your earbuds out and put it in her ear. Then you’re connected with about two feet of headphone cable.

IPods now have video, games, audio books and podcasts. Will iPods always be about the music?
Who knows? But it’s hard to imagine that music is not the epicenter of the iPod, for a long, long, long, long, long time. I was very lucky to grow up in a time when music really mattered. It wasn’t just something in the background; it really mattered to a generation of kids growing up. It really changed the world. I think that music faded in importance for a while, and the iPod has helped to bring music back into people’s lives in a really meaningful way. Music is so deep within all of us, but it’s easy to go for a day or a week or a month or a year without really listening to music. And the iPod has changed that for tens of millions of people, and that makes me really happy, because I think music is good for the soul.


© 2006 MSNBC.com

Filed under: Copy+Paste, Inspiring

Cameraphone Photography

People are not in a habit to see an opportunity to click photos in cameraphones. To give them something so that whenever they see an interesting thing, their brains tell them – “let me snap it”. There are lots of applications which lets you share photos quickly, but no applications which makes you ‘want’ to click photos.

Cameraphones are not It happens so often that a moment looks great when you’re there personally but it loses its specialty when seen via a photo.

JAPAN Cameraphone culture – Phone cameras since 2000
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As the mundane is elevated to a photographic object, the everyday is now the site of potential news and visual archiving.

“In comparison to the traditional camera, which gets trotted out for special excursions and events … camera phones capture the more fleeting and unexpected moments.”

USES
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Purikura Photography

User Scenarios- An Emerging Thumb Culture
http://web-jpn.org/trends01/article/030110fea_r.html

Strange Usage Scenarios- Clicking at a Funeral
http://us.gizmodo.com/gadgets/cellphones/the-latest-cameraphone-trend-funerals-155345.php

Comments to the post

> “This is what makes cultures different. My grandfather-in-law’s funeral was EXTREMELY well documented by a Japanese fellow (friend of his from long ago) who walked all over taking pictures (LOTS of pictures, per stereotype) during the service and at the graveside. Some people thought it was tacky, but they also appreciated seeing the pictures (of the deceased and of the family who gathered) afterwards…”

> “Ive actually taken photos at a funeral before with my cell phone. It was the only camera I had handy at the time and I thought it was much more respectful than pulling out the good ol 5.1 megapixel digicam.”

visual note taking. For example, wesaw one user snapping a photo of a job advertisement poster and another taking a picture
of the titles of some books she intended to track down in the library
This kind of visual note taking is relatively infrequent among the cases we recorded.
When they are no longer needed, these kinds of photos tend to get erased from memory.

“I thought if I snapped it I might remember it just a little later.”

“I took it thinking I would show my mom. My friend’s appearance really changed compared to elementary school.”

PROBLEMS
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“No matter what the technology, there’ll always be people who don’t mind their manners.”
Mizuko Ito, an expert on mobile phone culture at Keio University in Tokyo

“Digital shoplifting” is another concern.

“Sending and sharing pictures is a universal human trait so just making it easy for people to send pictures, and having handsets that take good pictures, that’s really the key. We’re only going to see that trend accelerate in the future.”
Matthew Nicholson of Japanese mobile firm Jphone

Attitude of the cameraphone owner
“personal awareness, persistent alertness to the visually newsworthy”

Filed under: Copy+Paste

Pic

PERSONAL PHOTOGRAPHY

personal -
exclusive photos,
intimate photos,
own photos,
private photos,
secret photos,
special photos,
face-to-face photos,

what is your behavior with someone personal ?
do anything, not shy

when something is personal, you visit it regularly ? not photos

If you pass a restaurant, its “todays’ special” menu appears on your phone

Filed under: Uncategorized

Product-ive Thoughts?

Creating UGC

How to go about building a web service (a designers perspective)

vision1 : acquired mobile blogging technology – want to give it a new face and launch
vision2 : make a fun blogging service for both web and mobile with focus on community building/social networking

what core area are we getting into ?
> web + mobile
> cameraphones
> photo-sharing
> blogging
> social networking
> all

competitors’ analysis
> their feature set – whats popular
> see what features matches with our “unique vision”
> whats the face/package of the service like
> also look at less popular ones – might find something valuable
>
==
whats blogging ?
do people know whats blogging ?
do people like blogging ?
do we want them to blog ?
==
do people use cameraphone to click photos ?
how many people use cameraphones as their main camera ?
why do they shoot pictures with their cameraphones ?
do they care about the quality of the shots they are taking ?
==
how many people blog thru their mobile ?

==
what we call blogging is done regularly by very few people

for a mass product, most popular between cameraphone, blogging and photo-sharing is photo-sharing

photo-sharing can be done from both web and mobile
photo-sharing is easier compared to blogging
blogging sounds very technical so not a ‘mass’ concept (examples of mySpace and flickr)
blogging means regular participation – photo-sharing can be occasional – people want freedom to click at their own time

most popular photo-shatring applications expand (add features) with time ex. photobucket

Whats the acquired tech do ?
photo uploading and sharing from both web and mobile

Advantage of mobile -
while it is happening
on the move

whose waiting at the other end ?
For what ?  (giving proof of something
Isnt there another way of doing all this ?
Why would motivate people to use only this method ?
Whats the urgency of uploading then and there ?
if the battery is dwindling, then priority would be to take a call, not take a pic

photos are of use-and-throw nature
can be great representation tools
click magazine photos

Click photo of what u have to do (people, place, events, typo, banners)
Click photo of what u would want to have (wishlist, objects, person, celebrities)
Make your own icons/visual representation (a person’s face for her birthday)
Recording voice (

Most recently uploaded (I was here)

Auto-change status

Innovative but Useless FUN
http://emptybottle.org/bullshit/

Innovative but somewhat Useful SERIOUS
WIRED Jargon-o-tron

Zoomerang

google analytics
widsets
splashblog

Filed under: Mind Musings

Heatmaps

HEATMAPS :: Heatmaps can be the end result of  both eye-tracking and clicks.
representing existing data in another format
value of heatmaps as a communication tool to board level executives ? Everything’s OK until they ask ‘why do you think people are not clicking here’
are quite useful if your site is popular enough
can be used for testing your design

What does a heatmap tell ?
which links are clicked most (how is that useful ?)
Find out which design encourages visitors to click deeper

What the heatmap doesnt tell ?
Did the visitor clicked a link because he wanted to OR was it just plain good looking
Are they able to see the link that I want them to
Should a section of the website be removed because users dont use it or they dont see it
What do you do to improve the page
Any application for how to interpret the data
“Do you have some blue text on a page that people are mistaking for a link?
Do you have links in a small font size, which people are missing when they try to click?
Do you have an unlinked logo or other graphical device that people think they can click on ?”

If we ask the user to perform a task and then put a heatmap, we can get an individual heatmap

Q: What fun-thing can be made out of a click heatmap ?
A:     Something with false clicks
An image with pseudo-links
selecting text
give them a choice of clicking 30 links

Ubiqutous : Eye tracking
doesnt tell how long the visitor saw a link

Non-ubi    : Click tracking

SOLUTION ::     we have to correlate their clicks, comments, and actions
1. Get some people to use the site with heatmap
2. Gather data and see which gets the maximum clicks/views
3. Get a second set of people and have a qualitative testing session
4. The heatmap will help formaulate the right questions for the test

Direct user observation can lead to more clear-cut insights as to why things are happening on your site

Filed under: Uncategorized

Me Twittering

RSS Alt+Tabs of an Open Mind

  • Web Zoo August 19, 2009
    Some animal logos chilling together in the Web 2.OO.. I mean ZOO.
    ashim
  • Indian Families as Consumers August 6, 2009
    Some interesting financial stats I found about Indian families.
    ashim
  • Vista Features I Would Like in Win7 August 5, 2009
    Some small but significant Vista features I would like to stay in Windows 7. These would positively enhance the user experience.
    ashim
  • Tags August 4, 2009
    Tag Clouds dont work for me. Reasons- 1 A tag cloud is all visual clutter, no information (or wisdom). 2 Only big text shows clearly, what about all others? Are the small ones only there to be ignored? 3 No one except the creator knows how the tags are interlinked. 4 You cant expect to find what you are [...]
    ashim
  • Unofficial Guide to Google Search March 18, 2009
    Am putting down some points that I use to do secondary research using Google and other sites.
    ashim
  • Its Not That Easy.. September 25, 2008
    Why do amazing game designers come up with nothing when they have to make a game to teach? Where does the magic go?
    ashim
  • Overflow of Cover Flows September 2, 2008
    Ever since Apple bough cover flow, it has fascinated many by its graceful display and ease of browsing information. Clones of cover-flow are now floating across the web, here are some of the cool ones we can use.
    ashim
  • Photosynth- The Missing Picture August 25, 2008
    Photosynth makes a 3D image composed of a collection of images created by thousands of people all over the world. Some ideas on how it can me made even more exciting!
    ashim
  • Mobile Banking in Delhi! July 19, 2008
    A newspaper article about money transactions being done by aam-junta through mobile phones. We're growing up in exciting times!
    ashim
  • On My Reading List July 18, 2008
    What do you get when the greatest storyteller combines with the most stunning visualizer.. some men to watch out for :)
    ashim