Remove 2018 Remove Design Strategy Remove Networking Remove Publication
article thumbnail

Why Your Website Needs a Mobile-First Design

Inkbot Design

The name is pretty self-explanatory – a mobile-first website is a website that starts with a mobile-friendly design, which is then adapted to work on desktops and larger screens. A responsive website is reactive, adapting to work well on mobile devices instead of specifically designed for mobile use. Navigation. −$3.02.

article thumbnail

20 Essential Architecture and Design Lectures to Catch During Fall/Winter 2023

Azure Magazine

For additional architecture and design lectures and other happenings, visit azuremagazine.com/events. Such commissions build on the practice’s focus on public work across scales and contexts, and on innovative approaches to preservation, sustainable systems, and a greater integration of architecture and landscape at the scale of buildings.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

It’s Time to Design City Parks As Mental Health Infrastructure for Everyone

Azure Magazine

An upcoming DesignTO exhibition explores this idea , asking us what safety looks like in our public parks and outdoor green spaces. The Bentway’s Safe in Public Space series , published in partnership with Azure last year, revealed many similar sentiments. it was the first time I had ever felt unsafe in an Asian body.

article thumbnail

The secrets and pitfalls of designing persuasive technologies

UX Collective

As a starting point, research advises the following examples: For increasing motivation, videos, social networks, and gamification, in general, can be effective solutions. A quick summary of dark design strategies. 2018, April) ? 2018, May). UX Designers’ Activation of Stakeholder and User Values.

article thumbnail

Product lessons from the history of HBO

UX Collective

Atomic network As Andrew Chen recently articulated in The Cold Start Problem [2], a good strategy for growth is finding an initial atomic network , ensuring the product delivers on its promise before expanding to other networks , and repeating as needed. By 1973 Time Inc. wholly owned (and dissolved) Sterling.