• The UX Questions of Self-Driving Cars

    We are tantalizingly close to having a car experience that is more akin to a train, bus or plane.  We get in, we sit and read and when we arrive we get out.  All we need is self-driving cars.  I really want this world to exist, but there are many…

  • Corporate Acupuncture

    In the corporate body, there are pressure points.  These pressure points can yield disproportionate gain (or pain) throughout the enterprise.  Corporate Acupuncture is the art of finding those pressure points and applying some UX love to generate big results. Sometimes, the pressure points are due to individuals.  A great individual…

  • UX Design Principles

    I was at an enterprise designer meetup last night.  An interesting topic came up which was, “What are your enterprise design principles?”  I thought I had collected quite a few over the years that have helped me design.  Here they are with very short explanations. 1. Don’t move the cheese…

  • Practical Wisdom

    I just finished reading Practical Wisdom by Barry Schwartz. (Author of the great book The Paradox of Choice. – not to be confused with The Wisdom of Crowds, also a great book.) Practical Wisdom is a decent book, but more importantly, it points the way to design our ideal civilization. The book…

  • GPS Broken in my Samsung Note 3

    I need my phone to do about 2 things:  Call Katie and Google Maps.  I have a terrible sense of direction.  When I was younger I would drive with paper maps.  I would need to pull over every mile or so to make sure I was where I was supposed…

  • The UX of Confluence 5.5

    I’ve been working on a new system for help articles at work.  We decided to try a Confluence Wiki from Atlassian.  I have to say, I have been pleasantly surprised by the excellent UX.  They clearly have poured a decent amount of love into this thing.  Here are some thoughts…

  • Planking

    Yesterday, I showed my kids the meme of “planking”.  Admittedly, this is a fairly dated meme, but they are young, so it’s new to them. Planking is a photo fad which involves lying face down with arms to the sides in unusual public spaces, photographing the scene and sharing the image online. In…

  • The UX of Breaking Bones

    My kid just broke his arm. He was on a skateboard for the first time.  What could possibly go wrong?  Well, he smacked onto the pavement and broke both big bones in his forearm.  Luckily, he was only a block away and his brothers came and got me. I could…

  • GarageBand Thank You

    I’ve got alot of different kinds of computers in my house.  A desktop from dell, a little Intel NUC, a Mac Mini, iPads, xBoxes, etc etc.  I am not generally a Mac user, but I help my kid with his Mac Mini. He (11 yrs old)  is a musician and…

  • Broken Links in Blogs

    I have been blogging for a long time.  17 Years, to be exact.  In my blog posts, I will often link to an image or somewhere on the web.  This is a terrible practice.  Here is why: I just downloaded a wordpress plugin to find broken links in my posts.…

  • Shovel or Hole

    I heard a phrase:  People don’t buy shovels, they buy holes. It’s taken me a very long while to respond to this because it sounds so good.  It rolls off the tongue and has an unexpected, logical quality.  It seems right, doesn’t it. The only problem is that it is…

  • Psychology of Acqui-hiring

    An interesting thought experiment came up today. A company I know acquired another company for 8 figures.  The purpose was Acqui-Hire.  This is the practice of acquiring a company for the talent, not for the product.  There were not alot of people in the company and the acquiring company immediately…

  • Skype, Just let me quit!

    I don’t need skype at work.  So when my computer boots up, I right click on Skype and click “Quit” I was pretty clear of what I wanted, right?  So why the heck does skype give me this window?   Honestly, screw you skype!  Stop bothering me.  No other program…

  • I Miss Defrag

    For the old folks…remember Windows 95.  It used a FAT file system, not the more modern NTFS (for Windows).  It needed to be defragged to run at optimal speeds.  I loved the entire idea of a defrag.  It was like cleaning up a room, putting each thing in it’s place.…