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Week 1 Response // Norman's UDD

Valerie yeah

Wednesday, Nov 22, 2017 - 04:20:57 am

@ vye001

Ps: As i am writing this after everything we have gone through this semester, i would be taking a different approach with this response to Donald Norman's chapter on the Design of Everyday things.

Designing well is not easy. Why? It is not just about the aesthetics of the object. It needs to sell well. It needs to function well. It Read more →

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[Response] Week 1 - The Design of Everyday Things by Don Norman

Yaaayu

Saturday, Aug 26, 2017 - 10:38:23 pm

@ Yaaayu's

Chapter 1 of “The Design of Everyday Things” was informative as it pointed out many things that do not stand out to me in everyday life. Don Norman gave a term to classify certain conditions or situations that we experienced daily. He put together numerous everyday examples to illustrate his points to readers and it was easy to relate and Read more →

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Response on: The Design Of Everyday Things - Don Norman

HongSheng

Saturday, Aug 26, 2017 - 02:16:06 am

@ Jayden

Chapter 1

From the first chapter of the book, I could understand a few of the key points the author is trying to bring across. Firstly, would be the experience of handling a door, having the typical “push/pull” problem. We all have encountered this problem in our lives, pushing a pull door, vice versa. Even though design itself have advanced a Read more →

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RESPONSE: Chapter 1 of The Design of Everyday Things by Donald Norm

Su Hwee Lim

Friday, Aug 25, 2017 - 08:16:09 pm

@ Hwee's

 The Psychopathology of Everyday Things

The reading was interesting where Donald touch on the simple things and elaborate on the process of how we interact with it through discoverability and understanding. Taking one example of the ADM glass door that located beside the office on level one, it is one of the Norman doors. I was nodding internally while reading the Read more →

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Response on 'The Psychopathology of Everyday Things' from The Design of Everyday Things

Jeremy

Monday, Aug 21, 2017 - 03:45:19 pm

@ J E M S

‘The Psychopathology of Everyday things’ gave a more profound approach to design considerations which I usually abide to. As a design student, discoverability and understanding, unconsciously form part of the design thinking and process that I follow to conceptualize and design. Those terms were not properly defined prior to the reading but were internalized and naturally occurring. I had this Read more →

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[Response] The Design of Everyday Things

Ping

Monday, Aug 21, 2017 - 03:19:52 pm

@ Ping's

In the first chapter, Norman introduces us to the concept of Human-Centred Design (HCD), as well as two of the most important characteristics of good design — discoverability and understanding, and the six fundamental psychological concepts that discoverability encompasses: affordances, signifiers, constraints, mappings, feedback, and conceptual model.

With each of the psychological concepts, Norman uses relatable everyday examples to illustrate them, Read more →

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UX Thoughts: The Design of Everyday Things

Elizabeth

Monday, Aug 21, 2017 - 03:18:09 pm

@ Elizabeth Klare

Donald Norman’s first chapter of The Design of Everyday Things made me realize how difficult it is to explain design to someone. He has taken an idea that is at the center of design — the user experience — and analyzed its parts in a way that almost becomes scientific or mathematical. The way he describes affordances, signifiers and feedback Read more →

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The Design of Everyday Things (Chapter 1): Response

Kaywerlyn

Monday, Aug 21, 2017 - 03:17:25 pm

@ /kaywerlyn

In response to The Design of Everyday Things by Don Norman, chapter 1: The Psychopathology of Everyday Things, I believe that good design has to be a human-centered design. I feel that a human-centered design has to be clear and precise about the functions and ability of the product, and the target consumers have to find the product easy to Read more →

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The Design of Everyday Things – Chapter 1

Raymond A Pradhana

Monday, Aug 21, 2017 - 03:17:25 pm

@ Raymond

Response to Chapter 1: Humans have always been great at adapting to unknown situations. We connect related (or even unrelated) past experiences to build conceptual models of a new experience. This implies that every single individual might have different way of perceiving things. What seems easy to use to someone might be hard to another.

It is our job as designers to Read more →

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Chapter 1: The Design of Everyday Things

Viet Nguyen

Monday, Aug 21, 2017 - 03:17:21 pm

@ Viet Nguyen

Thinking of affordances as a relationship between two properties is an interesting point that Norman mentions. Prior to reading The Design of Everyday Things, I have thought of objects and their affordances only within the context of one particular user. For example, a car affords a person with the ability to drive. But thinking of it as a relationship between Read more →

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