Free clip art! Download the SVG file of this image here and you can have fun all day building Powerpoint decks. Just add labels!
Monday, October 23, 2017
Wednesday, October 4, 2017
Saturday, September 30, 2017
Tuesday, September 26, 2017
Perfect autosave
One of the challenges in mobile design is informing the user something has happened -- a form has been submitted or field update saved. The boring and accepted way to do this is a popup window that says "You just did something!" And if your developers are over thirty, they probably will insist on putting a confirmation button to dismiss the window. Under 30, they probably have the window fade after a second or two, or when you tap out of it. Without this, the change might be subtle enough that you are unsure what if anything just happened, and depending on connectivity, the ubiquitous loading animation may flash too quickly to do little more than add to the confusion. And don't forget by adding text to a confirmation window you are creating another language/data element to worry about when you decide its time to go multi-lingual.
So I would like to give this to the world, the perfect autosave image.
Take it, use it, enjoy it. Me? I use it when a user updates via select/dropdown, or clicks into a field, makes a change, then clicks out -- the image fades in then out a second later. And as a bonus, I add this sound effect which reinforces that something has indeed occurred.
Enjoy!
So I would like to give this to the world, the perfect autosave image.
Take it, use it, enjoy it. Me? I use it when a user updates via select/dropdown, or clicks into a field, makes a change, then clicks out -- the image fades in then out a second later. And as a bonus, I add this sound effect which reinforces that something has indeed occurred.
Enjoy!
Topics:
mobile,
user experience
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
Finally found my blog password!
Yeah, so it's been a few years since I posted anything. This does not mean I have not had any opinions or thoughts worth sharing, only that I kept trying to cram them into 140 characters (or less) -- with questionable results.
Anyway, been doing a lot of thinking about UX and mobile in particular, have been working in Angular.js, Node.js, Sass and vector images, and done some things and thought of some things that may be useful to others.
Stay tuned!
Anyway, been doing a lot of thinking about UX and mobile in particular, have been working in Angular.js, Node.js, Sass and vector images, and done some things and thought of some things that may be useful to others.
Stay tuned!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)