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9 posts tagged with "UX"

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Designing and Building Responsive Web Applications

· 4 min read
Marco Lian Bantolino
LINCS Software Development Co-op

When designing and building a web application, ensuring that it is responsive is paramount. A responsive application looks good and functions well on all screen sizes and devices. LINCS applications are being designed to be viewed in a wide range of ways: from tablets to laptops to whiteboard-sized interactive screens. It can be quite hard to achieve this level of responsiveness, but with the help of CSS tools, techniques, and frameworks, the task becomes a lot easier...

Researching and Designing for Actionability

· 5 min read
Jordan Lum
LINCS UX Co-op

The UX team has been conducting user research on LINCS tools to get them ready to move from development to production. So far, we have completed card sorts, usability tests, surveys, and interviews. This research has provided us with a wealth of information. However, if we want to translate what we’ve learned into meaningful, productive changes to the tools’ designs, we must keep actionability at the centre of our research practice...

Stand-ups for Software Development

· 3 min read
Eason Liang
LINCS Software Development Co-op

When I began my first co-op placement, I had no idea how software development worked in a professional environment. Previously, my experience had only been in the classroom, where  my classmates and I developed software for assignments. When I moved into a professional context, I was exposed to new ways of collaborating, among them stand-up meetings, or stand-ups...

The Design Deep Dive

· 3 min read
Farhad Omarzad
LINCS UX Co-op

During my time at LINCS, the UX team has laid the groundwork for implementing an intuitive and effortless user flow for ResearchSpace. To accomplish this, we have conducted numerous user and usability tests, interviews, and card sorts.

Working on ResearchSpace was my first real experience in the world of UI/UX. It was also my first time working on a design team, and I was blown away by the talent of my peers...

Speaking in Different Languages: Working Across Groups and Disciplines

· 4 min read
Nem Brunell
LINCS UX Co-op

The situation is this: you’ve been asked to design a way for a researcher to easily move between two tools. You familiarize yourself with both tools, learn about the known issues, and read about what’s already been tried. You spend a few days deciding on the best way to get from point A to point B. You spend a few more days designing how it will look. Finally, you unveil your prototype in a meeting with the development team ... only to find out that moving between the tools is not technically possible. Or that it would take too long to build your design. Or that moving between tools opens up new issues on the back end.

How do you go forward? ...

Two Roads Diverged in a Tube Map, and I Took the One Less Followed

· 3 min read
Evan Rees
LINCS UX Co-op

The road to UX for me has been long and winding, and I, much like the LINCS users in the Tube Map in Figma, have found myself at various stations along the way, assessing where I should go next. Initially studying Life Sciences at University of Toronto, I made the switch after first year to a specialism in Sociocultural Anthropology. Upon graduation and unsure where to go with my career, I began a Masters of Public and International Affairs at University of Ottawa. I quickly realised that I was too passive by nature to be a diplomat, and I lacked the passion for politics that many in my cohort shared. What I really wanted was something related to my background in Anthropology.

And so, enter UofT’s Faculty of Information...

User-Centric Problem Solving

· 5 min read
Sana Javeed
LINCS UX Co-op

Before becoming a UX Design student at University of Toronto, I used to solve a problem just by identifying what the problem was and then coming up with a band-aid solution. However, over a period of time, I realized that by using such an approach—opting for the easiest solution—I was often actively ignoring the real problem and sometimes even allowing it to worsen...

Invisible Design

· 6 min read
Amardeep Singh
LINCS Computer Science Co-op

“Most people make the mistake of thinking design is what it looks like. People think it’s this veneer—that the designers are handed this box and told, ‘Make it look good!’ That’s not what we think design is. It’s not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works.” - Steve Jobs

If you are a developer, designer, or a creative individual interested in design, you are probably familiar with the phrase “good design is invisible.” Everything is designed—there is thought behind every project or product—but only a few things are designed well. When design is done poorly everyone tends to notice its flaws, but when design is done well it usually goes unnoticed...

Design Frolics and Demystifying User Interface Design

· 9 min read
Kathleen McCulloch-Cop
SCALE Undergraduate Research Assistant
Rashmeet Kaur
SCALE Undergraduate Research Assistant

I (Kathleen) was introduced to user interface design at the start of my post-secondary education with Software Design 1, the first class on the first day of my first (ever) semester. I crowded into a lecture hall with 150 other people, each of us more nervous and unsure than the last, and sat down to find out just what exactly was a degree in Software Engineering going to look like. It began with a warm introduction and then launched into a 45-slide PowerPoint on the twelve principles of design...