Remove 2000 Remove Industrial Design Remove Publishing
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Dot Dot Dot Is the Most Influential Design Magazine You’ve Never Heard Of

Eye on Design

asked the cover of the first issue of Dot Dot Dot , published in April 2000. And so begins this new magazine founded by graphic designers Peter Bil’ak, Stuart Bertollotti-Bailey, and Jürgen X. Certainly, if you were a particular type of designer in the early 2000s, Dot Dot Dot was the most exciting publication you could find.

Magazine 111
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Remembering Richard McConnell 1942-2020: the inimitable exhibition designer

Design Week

“There is only one crime that an exhibition designer can commit – and that is to be boring!” ” Interviewed for CSD magazine in 2000, this was Dick McConnell being typically forthright on the subject he taught for over three decades in Kingston-upon-Hull. A tireless campaigner.

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iPhone’s focus features and Hick’s law: a context-first design approach

UX Collective

Perhaps famed industrial designer Dieter Rams said it best: “Less, but better.” Jon Yablonski (2021) Laws of UX: Using Psychology to Design Better Products & Services ? The benefits of simplifying are universal and proven to yield results in virtually all applications. Inc.com ² Hick, W. Hyman, R (March 1953). Iyengar, S.

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The waves of research practice

UX Collective

Ten years later, Nielsen & Norman would publish Usability Engineering (1993) , and a year after that, the first edition of Handbook of Usability Testing (1994) would help to drive the work into clearer and better-understood practices. Wave 2: 2000 to ~2045 The humanizing Product Wave grew from the idealism of User Experience.

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Society drives how we build products, create brands, and design experiences

UX Collective

Companies without viable business plans jumped aboard with endless IPOs, resulting in a burst in 2000. Fear of missing out The dot-com bubble from the late 1990s saw the rise of many online products and services, driven by the increased global adoption of the Internet and personal computing. Compelling.

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Ken Garland Was Graphic Design’s Moral Compass

Eye on Design

Although he was part of an influential and widely-lauded generation of British designers who rose to prominence in sixties London, it is safe to say that Ken was one of a kind. . In fact, the original manifesto has inspired repeats, such as the 2000 version first published by Adbusters, and a more climate-crisis focused edition from 2020.

Graphic 131
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Women You Should Know in Graphic Design History

Tuts Plus

Her approach to design is experimental, not only when it comes to layout but also to the book as a tangible object. Irma started her career at The Government Printing and Publishing Office by doing an internship. There she did most of the work that put her on the radar in the design industry. Jane Davis Doggett.