Our November event is an exciting opportunity to get some hands-on play time with a variety of interactive technologies in the recently launched FELT lab, located in St. Jacobs. uxWaterloo is one of the very first groups to make use of this terrific new facility!
A digital sandbox for serious play
Founded by the University of Waterloo’s Research Entrepreneurship Acceleration Program (REAP), the FELT lab is designed to spark “research entrepreneurship” between UW students, faculty and industry experts. It focuses particularly on interactivity and responsiveness in digital display environments, and has numerous corporate partners who’ve brought some terrific toys to the table.
The lab is located in the offices of Quarry Integrated Communications, but has a separate entrance off King Street in St. Jacobs. Inside the lab, you’ll find a range of emerging technologies such as Christie Canada’s MicroTiles, GestureTek’s Cube and Kiosk, Float4’s interactive FX, and Kommerz’s Mixed Reality Interface (MRI).
And we’re going to have some serious fun!
uxWaterloo’s event will feature some hands-on creative, integrative thinking, and building. Guided by students from the REAP program, we’ll work in groups to brainstorm (and bodystorm!) unique combinations and innovative applications of the lab’s technologies. We’ll pitch our best ideas to each other while learning about all the lab’s capabilities and technologies in the process. And, we’ll be documenting the process and ideas on video, ensuring that our creative energy is captured for posterity.
Play! Create! Share! Learn! It’s going to be an awesome event!
Thursday November 24, 2011
5:30 to 7:00 pm
FELT Lab at Quarry Integrated Communications
1440 King Street North, St. Jacobs, Ontario
[Map] Sign up now, as space is limited!
In our October uxWaterloo meeting, we worked in groups to brainstorm ideas to improve the usability of the Green Home Planner, which is an online tool made by the Residential Energy Efficiency Program (REEP). REEP is an environmental, charitable organization that has provided home energy evaluations in Waterloo Region since 1999.
In the workshop, we got an overview of the company, the product, and the personas of the customers who use the Green Home Planner. This tool is used by home owners to plan upgrades based on REEP’s audit of their home’s environmental performance.
After brainstorming in our groups, each group presented and showed their design mockups. Overall, we agreed on the following tips to improve the user experience of this product:
Provide immediate feedback– Allow users to get a updates right away by showing them results on the same screen as where they entered information
Make the site fun and engaging - Motivate the user to complete their information, involve elements of gaming, and allow sharing with social media
Remove barriers to entry- Do not ask a user to register immediately and let them explore
Convey information with images - Allow someone to build their own virtual house and use graphs or meters to view savings and efficiency levels
Use easy input options - Allow users to connect to local providers through postal codes and auto entry of bills
Thanks to all of our workshop participants for bringing their innovative ideas and to REEP for providing us with an excellent design challenge!
Thursday October 20, 2010
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Accelerator Centre
295 Hagey Blvd., Waterloo
Sign up now, as space is limited!
The October edition of uxWaterloo features a hands-on design workshop for the Residential Energy Efficiency Program (REEP). We’ll work in groups to generate ideas for improving the user experience of REEP’s Green Home Planner, a web-based tool used by home owners to plan upgrades based on REEP’s audit of their home’s environmental performance. Bring your creativity and your curiosity!
About REEP
REEP is an environmental, charitable organization that has provided home energy evaluations in Waterloo Region since 1999. Over the past twelve years, REEP’s Certified Energy Advisors have shown 13,235 homeowners how to save 18,142 tonnes in greenhouse gas emissions and $4,531,000 annually on their energy bills. Participants have reduced their heat loss by an average of 25% through home retrofits based on REEP’s recommendations.
Download REEP’s personas and a product brief
To provide some context for this month’s design workshop, REEP has drafted 2 documents that describe their target audience and the product we’ll be working on. Download the PDF files below:
How can the digital world be more emotionally resonant and human? Now that a large amount of web activity takes place in real-time social environments between people directly instead of graphic interfaces, we’re bringing together some of the best people who know how to do this in live performance: actors, directors, dancers, casting agents etc. We’ll investigate how they work to create conditions for great emotional engagement and mix them in conversation with innovative thinkers and makers from the digital world.
Heather Gold, solo performer, social artist, web veteran and co-founder of TummelVision.tv has mixed web and performance approaches for over 10 years exploring public intimacy. She’s now extending her inquiry to the broader community and will “tummel” the workshop, bringing together to come up with our collective insights in this landmark gathering to discover direction for the next stage of social web and business and possibly even performance.
We’ve all seen the frustrations of novice users struggling with a piece of software not designed for them. Novices need features to help guide them through complex software. On the other hand, features designed to help novices may slowdown and frustrate expert users. Before we can design for novices and experts, we need to know how both groups interact with software. Knowing what novices and experts need from software, and which group we should design for, will help us decide what features to include and exclude.
During this session, we will look at who novices are, who experts are, and who’s in between. We will then have an extensive group discussion about which level of expertise people design for and how they approach design for that group.
Tom Robinson is a PhD student at the University of Waterloo. He is researching how people learn to use computer software, looking at the stages of knowledge that people pass through as they learn. Previously, he worked at Maplesoft and TD bank as a GUI developer. He has a bachelors and masters degree in Computer Science, also from the University of Waterloo.
Thursday September 15, 2010
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Accelerator Centre
295 Hagey Blvd., Waterloo
This month we’re meeting once again at the Red Baron Lounge, located on-site at the Brick Brewery in Uptown Waterloo. We’ll have a couple of brief presentations about UX happenings around town — and plenty of time for meeting new faces, talking shop, and raising a few glasses together. This is a private gathering for UX Waterloo, in which you can sample just about everything the brewery has to offer.
Where and when
Thursday August 18, 2011
5:30 to 7:30 pm
Red Baron Lounge at the Brick Brewery
(Entrance at the side of the building near the front)
181 King Street South
Waterloo, ONT
[Map]
RSVP required
You must RSVP to attend, as this is a licensed event. We’ll be checking names at the door. Sign up early before it’s sold out!
We’ve got something special on tap for UX Waterloo this summer. In both July and August, we’ll be meeting at the Red Baron Lounge, located on-site at the Brick Brewery in Uptown Waterloo. Our thanks to Brick Brewery for sponsoring this event! It’s a private gathering just for us, in which you can sample just about everything the brewery has to offer.
We’ll have a few brief presentations about UX happenings around town. And plenty of time for meeting new faces, talking shop, and raising a few glasses together.
Where and when
Tuesday July 19, 2011
5:30 to 7:30 pm
Red Baron Lounge at the Brick Brewery
(Entrance at the side of the building near the front)
181 King Street South
Waterloo, ONT
[Map]
RSVP required
You must RSVP to attend, as this is a licensed event. We’ll be checking names at the door. Sign up early before it’s sold out!
Please thank our sponsor!
Many thanks to Brick Brewery for sponsoring UX Waterloo this summer. Please visit Brick on Facebook and “Like” them. Maybe even drop a comment to let them know you appreciate their support!
In our June event, the uxWaterloo group had Bob Rushby speak about Digital Light. From the Google office in Kitchener, Bob took us through the concepts that are possible when pixels are everywhere! Digital Light is a vision of the future, where the entire world becomes a canvas for expression.
Five years from now, Bob predicts that lighting will be transformed. Lighting will no longer simply illuminate, but it will be turned into cheap pixels. Pixels have already been used so you can dial from a keyboard that is projected onto your hand, doctors can see the veins of a patient, and customers can order from menus that look like they are part of the table they are sitting at! Bob really showed us through his examples that the possibilities are endless and you can let your imagination run wild. Check out the videos on the Baanto website to see how they have used pixels to allow multiple users interact with the same display and use this interaction with pixels as a social opportunity.
“Twists and Turns” on the Uniqa Tower, Vienna
The Uniqa Tower is a great example of how architecture can be used as art and signage. Take a look at this video, where it looks like the tower itself is bending and turning.
Find out more about Digital Light!
Thanks again to Bob for sharing his thoughts and ideas with us. Bob retired from Christie Digital Systems Canada Inc. in February 2011 after an exciting career leading talented teams in the creation of ground-breaking high technology products. Christie is a global leader in projection and electronic display products and has the world’s largest installed base of digital cinema projection systems. Bob is currently involved with several exciting university entrepreneurship initiatives — in particular, the University of Waterloo REAP program and the Ryerson University Digital Media Zone. He is also writing a book on the theme of Digital Light… pixels everywhere. To find out more, please contact Bob or check out the following sites.
In our May uxWaterloo event, Simon Woodside shared the “single screen” approach that he’s used at Monolith Interactive when building iOS products. He believes that your users will thank you for using a single screen approach, as they will find it more discoverable and that all objects will be easily related to each other. Popovers are useful in designs that use a single screen approach. A popover will allow for the rest of the screen to be used, even while it is open.
During the hands-on workshop portion of this event, we received client specifications for an iPad application. We worked in groups to come up with a single screen solution that would meet the client’s needs. When our groups showed our wireframes and talked through our designs, we were impressed by the many different ways each group interpreted the specifications! Then, seeing how Simon’s team designed their solution truly showed how a single screen approach can work effectively, on both mobile or tablet applications.
Thanks to Simon for sharing with our group and facilitating this fun and informative workshop!
Remember that our June event, “Pixels Everywhere!” by Bob Rushby, has been moved to the Google office.
Hope to see you there next week!
Next event- Pixels Everywhere- Thursday June 16, 2010 5:30 to 7:00 pm
Google Waterloo
151 Charles Street West, Suite 200
Kitchener, ONT
The location for our next event, “Pixels Everywhere!” by Bob Rushby, has been moved to the Google office. If you haven’t yet visited The Hub, here’s your chance to check out this amazing new space!
Thursday June 16, 2010 5:30 to 7:00 pm
Google Waterloo
151 Charles Street West, Suite 200
Kitchener, ONT
[Map]
uxWaterloo is a professional interest community for anyone concerned about improving the “user experience” of products and services. User experience (or UX) is a somewhat vague term, but we’ve chosen it deliberately because it speaks to the broad range of people and professions who are involved. Located in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, we meet once a month and engage in a range of activities. Interested? Learn more about us, or check out our next event.
Join uxWaterloo
To join the group and receive alerts about upcoming events, please sign up (it's free!) with the User Experience Design peer group at Communitech's website.
NOTE: Given our joint relationship with IxDA, Communitech has waived their usual requirement that only paying members may join peer groups. When signing up, please disregard the notice stating "P2P groups are only available to Communitech Members". Thanks, Communitech!
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