A review of Storytelling for User Experience
by Whitney Quesenbery & Kevin Brooks and UX Storytellers: Connecting the Dots
Edited by Jan Jursa, Stephen Köver, & Jutta Grünewald. A
A review of The Wall Street Guide to Information Graphics: The Do’s and Don’ts of Presenting Data, Facts, and Figures by Dona M. Wong.
Guide to creating information graphics that…
A review of several books on the Shakers, noting the ways in which they pioneered what we would call today “user-centered design.”
This compendium provides intellectual tools for those active in changing the world by making products and services more available to all who could benefit from them.
This book was written for everyone, about everything, and it covers a wide range of topics but is skimpy on details and specific information.
A whole book on card sorting? This book is replete with solid advice, clearly written and illustrated, and well supported by case studies and examples.
This updated edition of a text about designing user-interfaces is testament to the evolution of these and other related topics the past two decades.
Two books about designing forms, similar in subject matter but contain different approaches to defining problems, providing solutions, and presenting their approach in book design storytelling.
The book is a consciousness-raiser for family members who are dealing with aging seniors as they enter new phases of their lives.
This book’s focus on accessibility during the entire user-centered design process integrates accessibility throughout product development and provides readers with a readable introduction to incorporating these concerns into daily professional…