Thursday, November 13th, 2008, 659 days ago

Motion track


More Motion Tracking from vanderlin on Vimeo.


Motion Tracking from vanderlin on Vimeo.

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008, 660 days ago

Amazing flash ideas

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008, 660 days ago

Openframeworks.cc


made with openFrameworks from openFrameworks on Vimeo.

Saturday, November 8th, 2008, 664 days ago

Flash prototype of interaction research

Click the white board bellow:

This is an interaction prototype made to evaluate the behavior of people’s communication in public place such as elevator or aisle. As you experienced, people who are strangers will not easily to communicate with each other, and the embarrassed situation is always so frequency while stay with a guy not so familiar with each other.

Resulting from the situation above, i hope apply persuasive technology to create a device or some software-like environment to enhance strangers’ communication. It is not force with coercion but persuasive with a manual intendancy to enhance the ice-breaking opportunities.

Try it.

Saturday, November 8th, 2008, 664 days ago

Usability research of ‘The psychology of everyday things’

This is absolutely good book for usability design and research, most of all, this was published in 1988-twenty years ago, but the usability in china is still on initial stage.

The human mind is exquisitely tailored to make sense of the world. Give it the slightest clue and off it goes, providing explanation, rationalization, understanding. Consider the objects-books, radios, kitchen appliances, office machines, and light switches-that make up our everyday lives. Well-designed objects are easy to interpret and understand. They contain visible clues to their operation. Poorly designed objects can be difficult and frustrating to use. They provide no clues-or sometimes false clues. They trap the user and thwart the normal process of interpretation and understanding. Alas, poor design predominates. The result is world filled with frustration, with objects that can not be understood, with devices that lead errors. This book is an attempt to change this.

Thursday, November 6th, 2008, 666 days ago

Paper toolkit

[From stanford university HCI group]