Design, Digested 40 – Better thinking tools, digital ethics, accessibility
On this issue: tools for better thinking, digital ethics and moral theory, annotating designs for accessibility and more.
On this issue: tools for better thinking, digital ethics and moral theory, annotating designs for accessibility and more.
On this issue: the UX of banking, the state of web accessibility, the encyclopedia of microaggressions and more.
The intersection between sustainability and accessibility, World Braille Day, the state of mobile UX and more.
To wrap up the third month working as accessibility consultant for Italy’s top bank, I’m sharing a few things I learned.
Classic HCI demos, going beyond Nielsen’s Usability Heuristics, Apple’s The Greatest and more.
To wrap up the third month working as accessibility consultant for Italy’s top bank, I’m sharing a few things I learned.
Why everything looks the same, the limits of contrast checkers, changing perspectives over accessibility and more.
To wrap up the third month working as accessibility consultant for Italy’s top bank, I’m sharing a few things I learned.
How technology is shaping the physical world, spying appliances, dyslexia-friendly typefaces and more.
The difficulty of travelling for disabled people, the history of user interfaces, carbon footprinting and more.
The accessibility of Netflix’s subtitles, racist tech, small businesses in Tokyo and more.
As I took a closer look to the WCAG 2.1 success criteria, I decided to take a step-by-step approach to make my website entirely compliant. First post of a series.
Design is evolving, correcting designs of the past, why we ignore the obvious, building a more honest internet and why Greta Thunberg doesn’t want you to talk about her.
Discover the designers misguided concerns about disabled bodies; the future of accessibility standards; the infinite scroll effect; the influence of 80s cult phemon Max Headroom and more.
Stop bastardizing design with false empathy, fast fashion and sustainability, gender pay gap, and more.
This week: celebrating the web standards with Blue Beanie Day, accessibility, the current state of checkout UX, the meaning of Ikea names, and more.
This week: how to prevent user errors, the curb-cut effect, how creepy is that device, and users adapting to technology that wasn’t designed with them in mind.
This week, tired of seeing social media-related articles, I’m sharing older ones as an inspiration to follow your own path.
On week number 10 of my design inspiration series, I share resources about inclusive design, problematic social media facts, and a great music project.
In this inspiration series: a well-known website lost community trust with a redesign that didn’t take into account its users with disabilities.
Knitting website Ravelry lost the trust of their community after a rebranding effort caused several users adverse side effects from browsing the site. Well-known among knitters, crocheters, designers, spinners, and dyers, Ravelry is a free platform where users can organise and keep track of their projects, network with other people and sell their designs.
First instalment of my design inspiration series. This week: Killing Eve set design, accessibility on social media, bad design vs good design, and more.