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Next Leeds Event Monday 27th February – Accessibility in Practice

24/01/2012 in Accessibility, Usability

This session will be a practical look at Accessibility in action.

Clare Davidson from SimpleUsability will be joined by Barry Hill, who has been using Jaws for the past 15 years. This session will give you the opportunity to see how Barry navigates his way through websites using Jaws assistive technology. We will then discuss how accessible these websites are and what changes should be made to improve the user experience.

Clare Davidson is a User Experience Consultant, working at SimpleUsability. Previous roles have included working at Lloyds Banking Group and Aviva.

The event will be held courtesy of SimpleUsability and will be held in the Round Foundry Media Centre.

To order a free ticket please go to; http://accessibilityinaction.eventbrite.com/

To find us on twitter use #nuxuk or you can find us on facebook by searching ‘Northern User Experience’

NUX Manchester – Prototyping with Axure Presentations

16/06/2011 in Resources

Below are the presentations from the Axure session held on Monday 6th June which was kindly sponsored by Axure & Code Computerlove.


Part 1 – Prototyping with Axure RP – A brief introduction to Axure by Ali Zaman



Download Ali’s sample Axure RP file

Twitter: @web233


Part 2 – Prototyping with Axure RP – PROTOTYPING WORKSHOPS: for requirements, user insight & interaction design by Chris Bush



Twitter: @suthen


Part 3 – Prototyping with Axure RP – Using Axure for Usability Testing by Barry Briggs



Download Barry’s sample Axure RP files

Twitter: @quiffboy


Axure RP Licence Winner

Congratulations to James Darracott who is the lucky winner of a full Axure RP licence worth $589 which was kindly donated to us by Axure. A big thanks to Axure for being so generous with the prize.

If you are interested in trying out axure you can download a free 30 day trial.


Photos from the session

Usability and UX 101 Talk in Manchester – 10th Feb

24/01/2011 in Events

Details are below of an upcoming event I’m talking at, at MMU in Manchester.

“Usability & User Experience 101″

  • When: Thursday, February 10, 2011 from 5:00 PM – 7:00 PM (GMT)
  • Where: Michael E. Porter Lecture Theatre, MMU Business School, Aytoun Street, M1 3GH Manchester
  • Who with: Paul Rouke, Head of Usability at PRWD
  • Twitter Hashtag: #UX101
  • Register for FREE: http://saschoolux101.eventbrite.com/

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Leeds Event Monday 24 January 2011

07/12/2010 in Events

The next Northern User Experience event will be on Monday 24 January at Simple Usability in Leeds. We have three great sessions lined up:

  1. Remote Usability Testing
  2. Brainstorming of ideas for upcoming NUX sessions
  3. Interaction Architecture for Startups and Digital Agencies

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June 2010 Event Report – Discount Usability Testing

08/06/2010 in Events

The month’s event was held at the Brewery Tap on Monday 8 June 2010. It’s a while since we met in Leeds, and it was great to see four new people coming along. The main theme was discount usability testing…

Introductions

We started by introducing ourselves and what we do. We had people attending from Leeds, Harrogate, York and Lancaster. The steering group talked a bit about what Northern User Experience is and how it works.

Discount Usability Testing

book cover for Rocket Surgery Made EasyTonight’s session was facilitated by Keith Doyle. We listened to a Boagworld Podcast of an interview bewteen Paul Boag and Steve Krug about Krug’s new book called ‘Rocket Surgery Made Easy‘. This was followed by a discussion of Krug’s methodology and of how we carry out usability tests in general. Lee Duddell from What Users Do has met Steve Krug, and he explained the unmoderated usability tests which they offer – a service which Krug recommends in his book and which is discussed in the Podcast.

Instant Usability Testing

We had a quick go at Krug’s methods to identify the top few things which would improve the Northern User Experience website in the next month. One issue raised was to split the text out to make it easier to read, so in this post, I have added more headings – so hopefully this site is becoming more usable already!

What are your thoughts on discount usability testing?

You can add a comment here using the link below, tweet using the #nuxuk hashtag, or email the mailing / discussion – you can join using the form on the right. Let us know if you have written a on the subject in your blog, and we can create a link to your post.

Sponsor

Tonight’s venue was sponsored by www.extremeusability.co.uk

Eye-tracking studies: more than meets the eye

09/02/2009 in Accessibility, Information Architecture, News, Usability

There is an interesting eye tracking story over on the Google Blog, covering their results from some usability studies they carried out.

Specifically: eye tracking to test the use of thumbnails in search results.  Though the blog report is fairly brief, they did come to specific conclusion.

Our studies showed that the thumbnails did not strongly affect the order of scanning the results and seemed to make it easier for the participants to find the result they wanted.

There is a real time eye tracking video and some heat map images in the article too.

Go read the original and let us know what you think in the comments.

– Story from Official Google Blog.

Critical Friend

03/07/2008 in Accessibility, Usability

We talked a little in Wednesday’s (July 2nd) meeting about the lack of recognised qualifications to audit or certify a web site as “accessible”. I recalled a customer of my company had asked about the use of a “trusted friend”. Alas, my recollection was faulty and the phrase they had used was “critical friend”.

It is desirable that the system meets the W3C level 2 accessibility standards or conforms to another equivalent standard…
Please supply detail of how you audit your systems compliance to achieve accessibility standards. Do you make use of a ‘critical friend’ in this process if so, please state…

– extract from a request for tender document

I researched at the time the meaning of this phrase, which was new to me, and found the following reference in Wikipedia:

A critical friend can be defined as a trusted person who asks provocative questions, provides data to be examined through another lens, and offers critiques of a person’s work as a friend. A critical friend takes the time to fully understand the context of the work presented and the outcomes that the person or group is working toward. The friend is an advocate for the success of that work.

Wikipedia article ‘Critical Friend’

The concept is very interesting and seems to have been coined in the context of UK local government.

To paraphrase, I might describe a critical friend as someone who is knowledgeable and honest enough to tell you the truth about the bad stuff, but who will, equally, give praise about the good stuff. A ‘consultant’ who is likely to dress up your short comings in fancy praise-sounding words in a fat document for a fat fee will not do.

It needs to be someone who is knowledgeable about the system under review or at least the domain involved. Someone who perhaps has a moral interest in seeing that the system succeeds: both for your organisation as supplier and the end user as consumer, but who can still be paid a reasonable fee for their time.

In the case of an accessibility review it needs to be someone who can look at the whole picture; beyond just the validity of the mark-up and ticking the boxes from the WCAG check-lists. Someone who can empathise with at least some of the challenges faced by people with a range of disabilities. Someone who can understand the use cases and evaluate your system from a functional, goal oriented viewpoint.

It naturally follows that this someone must understand ‘usability’ and the very close relationship between the two disciplines — An accessible site is likely to be more usable and a more usable site goes a long way to address some of the cognitive accessibility issues.

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by hugopw

The future of interfaces

07/05/2008 in Information Architecture, Usability

As some of you already know, I’m a big fan of the idea of minority report style interfaces, and the Nintendo Wii. This guy has done some work with wiimotes to create cheap interfaces such as this Desktop VR display.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jd3-eiid-Uw

I’d like to start a thread on here about how we could approach the usability issues of VR displays like this, and really about how as we move forward what sort of challenges people see coming, and how they might be solved.

For a start, the reason I’m so keen on this idea, is that having had back pain due to sitting in a chair for prolonged periods, I can see a need for an “Active Interface” where I can spend my day moving about to interact with my computer.

I think that one of the interesting problems that the VR displays will pose, apart from the ability to link a point on the screen/in the space in front of you, with your finger/wiimote is that Information Architecture will become even more massively important. However, I think that by Benchmarking some real world solutions – like supermarkets, some of those problems will already have been solved.