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Submit ReviewWe’ve got a little update for you about UX podcast. We’ve been publishing an episode every other Friday without fail for just over a decade since episode 33, which is absolutely insane. It’s a streak of 277 episodes. 554 weeks. We’ve quite recently actually surpassed 2.5 million downloads.
What we’re going to do now is take the opportunity to change how we produce UX Podcast a little bit and move to having seasons of shows.
Which means that we’ve reached our first ever “end of season”. So episode 310 was the last episode of this current, ten year long, first season of UX podcast!
Season Two of UX podcast is going to be out in August of 2023.
We have already planned to bring you interviews from UXLx in, Lisbon, From Business to Buttons in Stockholm, and some other handpicked exciting guests. We might even throw in the odd link show. So make sure you are subscribed to us wherever you usually listening. There also our mailing list where we will let you know details about the next season.
To keep your podcast devoted brain cells in prime condition. You may also want to check out Per’s new podcast where he reads aloud a selection of his blog posts on digital ethics. Carefully with Per Axbom.
Remember to keep moving and see you on the other side (for season Two)
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The post An update from James and Per appeared first on UX Podcast.
Power dynamics, egos, “I know best”. The ways in which we go about solving problems need to be challenged and changed. Anna Kirah joins us to help us facilitate that change and make a move from design thinking towards transdisciplinary thinking.
We talk about what transdisciplinary thinking is and how this differs from teamwork and collaboration. We talk about the importance of connecting with people and self-reflection. We also try putting our egos in the bin.
“What if we created those tools together with the people we’re trying to understand? I think that just understanding that we think we sit with this expert hat, thinking that we know best, when in fact we’re closing doors to the beauty of the process…”
(Listening time: 39 minutes, transcript)
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The post #310 Fudge design thinking with Anna Kirah appeared first on UX Podcast.
Episode 309 is a linkshow. James and Per discuss two articles that have grabbed their attention – we feature articles about container queries being available to use in all major browsers and how design thinking was supposed to fix the world. Where did it go wrong?
Article one is… Container queries land in stable browsers by Una Kravets. “Container queries are especially handy for responsive design and reusable components. For example, enabling a card component that can lay out in one way when placed in a sidebar, and in a different configuration within a product grid.”
Our second featured article is… Design thinking was supposed to fix the world. Where did it go wrong? by Rebecca Ackermann. “Key to design thinking’s spread was its replicable aesthetic, represented by the Post-it note: a humble square that anyone can use in infinite ways. Not too precious, not too permanent, the ubiquitous Post-it promises a fast-moving, cooperative, egalitarian process for getting things done.”
(Listening time: 36 minutes, transcript)
The post #309 Container queries and design thinking appeared first on UX Podcast.
What is systems thinking and how can designers make use of it in their work? In her book Closing the loop, Sheryl Cababa lays out her answer and approach to this question. We talk to her and discuss some of the core definitions and concepts.
We talk about the difference between soft and hard systems, and even how design systems can be get muddled with system thinking. We look at three concepts of system thinking, how bounding is important, and stakeholder inclusion – as well as engaging in analysis and mapping in order to reduce, and avoid negative consequences.
“..systems thinking helps unearth, so that in many ways, we don’t waste time and effort and money, in doing duplicative things – as well as thinking about creative solutions that might not might not have occurred to us before..”
(Listening time: 51 minutes, transcript)
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The post #308 Systems thinking with Sheryl Cababa appeared first on UX Podcast.
In this conversation with Alex Schmidt, author of Deliberate Intervention, we discuss “policy” in relation to digital design and tech. We discuss how even though designers intend to do good and have a positive impact, harm can still happen as a result of our designs.
We talk about how it is natural for systems to produce unintended consequences and that understanding and accepting this is important to make things less harmful.
When we talk about how organisations prioritise certain groups of people over others and how that can be harmful, Alex mentions “the dance of policy creation”, where technology is introduced into society, society reacts, and then the policies have to change.
“As designers, we look at the detailed journey of a user or try to identify the pain points, the points of friction. But harms aren’t usually something that users identify in the course of research. They accrue to society on a broader level, not necessarily to individuals, and become apparent later on in time.”
(Listening time: 38 minutes, transcript)
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The post #307 Policy and design with Alexandra Schmidt appeared first on UX Podcast.
We are constantly simplifying the world around us and the people within it. This is a perfectly understandable reaction to the messy things we have to work with. But with every step back we are building a wall between the user and what it is to be human. We talk to Alastair about human centred design. How to use your senses and perception and take in the world around you.
“If you reduce humans to only being users then you remove large swathes of what it is to be human… the world of what it is to be human is vast and we really need to properly consider our humanity”
This classic episode features both the original interview with Alastair, plus parts of our “Journey number 6” conversation originally only available on SoundCloud.
(Listening time: 36 minutes, transcript)
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The post #306 Human centred design with Alastair Somerville (UXP Classic) appeared first on UX Podcast.
Episode 305 is a linkshow. James and Per discuss two articles that have grabbed their attention – we feature articles about designing for people with dyscalculia and low numeracy, and How ChatGPT is blowing Google out of the water: a UX breakdown.
Article one is… Designing for people with dyscalculia and low numeracy by Jane McFayden, Rachel Malic and Laura Parker. “There are simple ways we can design to help people make better sense of numbers. And this is vital. It could mean the difference between people using a service to access the support they need or not being able to use it at all.”
Our second featured article is… How ChatGPT is blowing Google out of the water: a UX breakdown by Megan Ng. “One potential weakness of ChatGPT is its lack of transparency. It should be able to provide clear and transparent reasons for its decisions or predictions, along with the sources of its data.”
(Listening time: 37 minutes, transcript)
The post #305 Dyscalculia and ChatGPT appeared first on UX Podcast.
Getting anything up and running takes both time and planing. Content strategist Natalie Marie Dunbar joins us to talk about her content strategy practice blueprint and how it can help you when building a practice. What to do in order to avoid being an unheard and unappreciated silo as you grow from being a solo practitioner to being an embedded part of the organisation.
Natalie’s book From Solo to Scaled: Building a Sustainable Content Strategy Practice has a 5-point blueprint as it’s core. It is an incredibly useful and applicable process, taking you from making a business case to measuring your success.
“We want the experience for our users to be seamless. They don’t need to know that there’s two different teams doing things. But in order to do that, building those strong relationships is absolutely key. And it’s also key to the longevity of the practice.”
(Listening time: 40 minutes, transcript)
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The post #304 Building a content strategy practice with Natalie Marie Dunbar appeared first on UX Podcast.
We take a dive into neuroscience and metacognition. Thinking about thinking and thinking about other minds. We are joined by Professor Stephen Fleming, neuroscientist and author of the book Know Thyself to learn more about how our cognition works and the implications for our work as mind-creating creatives and in the development of AI.
We discuss metacognition, self-realisation, prediction error signals and dopamine, theory of mind, AIs and confidence estimation,
“Metacognition literally means cognition, about cognition, or thinking about thinking. So it’s the capacity we have this weird and wonderful capacity, we have as humans to reflect on a know something about the operation of our own minds.”
(Listening time: 41 minutes, transcript)
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The post #303 Metacognition with Steve Fleming appeared first on UX Podcast.
We talk to Tom Greever about Articulating Design Decisions. How do we talk about our designs effectively with stakeholders? Every designer has to explain (and justify) their design decisions to non-designers but what are the skills tactics and methods that are needed to pull this off in a way that opens the door for your project to create or improve the user experience?
In this classic episode Per and James are joined by Christopher McCann to talk to Tom.
“We become facilitators in a discussion about design with people that don’t know how to talk about design. I think if we see that as our role, it becomes a lot easier to jump into that meeting and be effective. The problem is that we don’t always see ourselves in that role. We see ourselves as being there to receive feedback from them.”
(Listening time: 45 minutes, transcript)
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The post #302 Articulating design decisions with Tom Greever (UXP Classic) appeared first on UX Podcast.
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