Welcome to WordPress. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start writing!

In the book ‘The Undoing Project’, the author Michael Lewis dives into the history and work of Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky.

Decision-Making

Their work in the fields of decision sciences and behavioral economics earned Kahneman a Nobel prize as it helped shape how people think about decision-making under uncertainty (Tversky was deceased when the prize was awarded and Nobel prizes only go to those living otherwise he likely would have been honored alongside his longtime collaborator).
(閱讀全文…)

After much clamoring by its users, Twitter has to decided to make it easier to switch to a chronological view of your tweets.

Reversion

Originally launched this way, the change comes just a few years after Twitter created an algorithm that identifies and provides the user’s ‘most relevant’ tweets first. The change created quite an uproar when it first happened and has been the bane of many users since. Many feel that the chronology is what gave Twitter its benefit and have been demanding this reversion. This Verge.com article from 2016 quotes a user talking about the analytic-based feed:
(閱讀全文…)

Getting people to use your product requires more than onboarding, it demands a transition plan.

A New Edge

Tiger Woods is one of the most successful golfers of all time. In his prime, he was able to combine power with accuracy and solid putting to win more money on the PGA tour than any other golfer. He has the 2nd most career wins in the history of the PGA and will likely have the most by the time he retires. He has also won the 2nd most major tournaments (these bring out the best golfers) and still has a chance to claim the most here, too. His list of accomplishments is extensive.
(閱讀全文…)

“Confusion and clutter are failures of design, not attributes of information” – Edward Tufte

Data Overload

People throw around the term data overload all the time to describe a problem in a product. On the surface, this seems pretty direct. Users have trouble sorting through the data presented to them and routinely make bad decisions. Designers look at the UI, see how much data users are faced with and immediately declare that there was too much data for users to make the correct choice.
(閱讀全文…)