weightshift.com
Weightshift — Quick Hits
http://www.weightshift.com/work/archive
A Design Practice — San Francisco, CA. Mdash; SF, CA. It’s been a great pleasure to help our clients — from early-stage start-ups to mature tech companies — with their design and development needs. In addition, we’ve concepted and built a few of our own products. Here’s a selection we’re particularly fond of. Our friends at the Google Ventures Design Studio introduced us to one of their portfolio companies, DataFox. From 2009–2013, we designed, developed, refined and steered Panjiva. S user interface and...
wolfhead.weightshift.com
Weightshift — Memo: Interhoods and SitBy.Us Closed, For Now
http://wolfhead.weightshift.com/memo/interhoods-and-sitbyus-closed-for-now
A forward-thinking digital design and development studio, making experiences for many. Notes from the field. Wednesday, November 16, 2011. Interhoods and SitBy.Us Closed, For Now. Earlier this week we made the decision to close the doors on both Interhoods. The notes on both sites says it all:. That’s all for now. As we said above, maybe one or both will return in the future. But for now, they’re taking a bit of a rest. Picture Perfect in a Minute. Scott creates an augmented reality layer to Google Maps.
wolfhead.weightshift.com
Weightshift — Memo
http://wolfhead.weightshift.com/memo
A forward-thinking digital design and development studio, making experiences for many. Notes from the field. Tuesday, November 29, 2011. We’d been working on a project. Since late last year that debuted in September (more on that in the future). We built it using Google Maps. As its introductory hook, and while the project didn’t need nor have the scope for it at the time, Scott. Continue reading —. Wednesday, November 16, 2011. Interhoods and SitBy.Us Closed, For Now. The notes on both sites says it all:.
interfaceguru.blogspot.com
collaborate or die: March 2010
http://interfaceguru.blogspot.com/2010_03_01_archive.html
Documenting user experience and its impact on business and society. Wednesday, March 31, 2010. Babysitting the interface: The myth of self-service. Human intervention with software, Web pages, and kiosks is a regular occurrence across corporate America. You see it first-hand at airport counters, supermarkets, a co-worker's desk. We see it inside call centers and controlled environments. How much does this cost business, education, and nonprofits every day? How does he get to related content? In 2000, sev...