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| | Storytelling for User Experience: Crafting Stories for Better Design
Just as personas make users come alive for
user experience designers, stories make users’
lives real. User experience design is about
experience. Stories are those experiences.
As Kevin and Whitney say in this book: We all
hear stories. We all tell stories—every day in
all parts of our lives.... | | |
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SOA Modeling Patterns for Service Oriented Discovery and Analysis
One of the most challenging tasks in today’s business and information technology (IT) environments
is to communicate a solution to an organizational problem in a simple manner that can be easily
understood by business and IT personnel alike. Is it also arduous to explain in simple words how
a remedy to an enterprise concern can be... | | Practical Speech User Interface Design (Human Factors and Ergonomics)
Although speech is the most natural form of communication between humans, most people find using speech to communicate with machines anything but natural. Drawing from psychology, human-computer interaction, linguistics, and communication theory, Practical Speech User Interface Design provides a comprehensive yet concise... | | Web Design for ROI: Turning Browsers into Buyers & Prospects into Leads
This book is a child borne, like many others, of a cosmic combination of
passion, frustration, experience, and luck.
Passion—we quite simply love what we do and care deeply about the results. We hope we’re able to
communicate this in our writing.
Frustration—it seems for every victory we gain with... |
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| | The Autobiography of Malcolm X: As Told to Alex HaleyMalcolm X's searing memoir belongs on the small shelf of great autobiographies. The reasons are many: the blistering honesty with which he recounts his transformation from a bitter, self-destructive petty criminal into an articulate political activist, the continued relevance of his militant analysis of white racism, and his emphasis on... | | Visual Basic .NET Design PatternsExperience gives programmers a variety of wisdom. As programmers gain experience, they may recognize new problems as being similar to problems they have solved before. With even more experience, they recognize that solutions for similar problems follow recurring patterns. By being aware of these patterns, experienced programmers recognize... |
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