Items tagged "australia"

UX bookclub Canberra February 2010

Monday, January 18th, 2010 by Nathanael Boehm

Sorry, forgot to announce the January meeting we held last night where we reviewed Robert Hoekman, Jr’s Designing the Obvious and Todd Zaki Warfel’s new book Prototyping.

The next bookclub meeting is on 11 February 2010 where we’ll be discussing Scott McCloud’s Understanding Comics and some new New Riders books.

UX bookclub Canberra wiki

Canberra UX bookclub, Monday 16 November

Saturday, November 14th, 2009 by Nathanael Boehm

The next UX bookclub meeting in Canberra is tomorrow night at 6:30pm.

The venue is the bar attached to Hotel Realm in Barton; just look for the group of people with a copy of the same book in front of them. Go around the left side of the hotel from outside the main entrance.

The book being reviewed tomorrow is Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely but if you haven’t read it don’t worry. Not everyone has the opportunity to read every book the club reviews so just turn up and join in the discussion which inevitable wanders off into other topics.

Also, Donna Spencer will be giving a personal review of Scott Berkun’s new book Making Things Happen.

If you want to come  please let Keith Lang know and subscribe to the uxbookclubcanberra list for future events.

Unfortunately I will be missing out again on bookclub as I’ll be in Sydney for Global Entrepreneurs Week.

Welcome to Canberra

Saturday, October 17th, 2009 by Nathanael Boehm

My proposal to become UXnet local ambassador for Canberra, Australia was accepted last week so in my first post as ambassador for my city I would like to introduce myself and my local UX community.

I have been working in the web industry for ten years and currently label myself a web user interaction designer - what I consider to be a half-way hybrid between a web user experience strategist and a front-end developer/coder.”Interaction” focusses on the detail of the user interface aspect of experience design, specifically websites and web applications. I recently blogged more about this in “What is a user experience designer?“. You can also read more about me in my professional profile/bio or on LinkedIn.

I’m fairly active in the Australian web industry and have a sizeable professional network of colleagues who I’ve met and connected with at conferences such as Web Directions, Edge of the Web and UX Australia plus BarCampCanberra (which I’m an organiser of), BarCampSydney, Public Sphere, Web Standards Group and many other local and interstate professional & social events.

We were fortunate to have the inaugural UX Australia conference here in Canberra which was nice as most of the good conferences are held in Sydney and Melbourne, with Edge of the Web being held in Perth, although UX Australia will be in Melbourne for 2010.

One of the interesting things about Canberra is that it’s a medium-size city with a population of 320,000 but it’s also the only city in the Australian Capital Territory. So not only does Canberra have its own local government it also accommodates most of the infrastructure and administrative capacity of Federal Government and the Australian Parliament including the Australian Public Service.

So if you live in Canberra as an IT professional or indeed in any number of professions then you’re either working directly for government or working for an agency that’s working for government; my career is a good example of that. 90% of my work over the past decade has been for government.

Another good thing about Canberra is that due to the size of the city and the interconnectedness of such a large proportion of the workforce directly or indirectly engaged with government the web and design community here is quite open and not competitive. I don’t claim to know every user experience design professional in Canberra; there are people who don’t work in my field, who choose not to engage with their local community or just move in different or smaller circles. But of the people I do know I tend to connect with and converse with on a regular basis - plus we all seem to go to the same conferences and events.

I coordinate the local Canberra Twitter Usergroup meetings or rather I used to until I set up a mailing list and convinced others to be proactive and organise events. It’s not really about Twitter any more, it’s just a label for any sort of social event for my community … like today’s picnic down at the Cotter. So that’s a good place to catch up with other web professionals although we’ve had some success in enlarging the scope of it to include non-web people and even non-techs.

There’s other events like Open Coffee and Social Media Club … but the other regular event in Canberra of significance to my community is the UX bookclub, where we meet every month to discuss a book about user experience and design. The events themselves are a great opportunity to discuss some very interesting design, psychology and human-computer interaction topics in detail but I’ve found UXbookclub has been a great excuse to add to my bookshelf.

I try and add all local web events to the Oz IT Calendar hosted by Pollenizer, but if you want to know what’s happening in town then please feel free to contact me: nboehm@purecaffeine.com or follow me on Twitter: @NathanaelB.

We have some amazingly talented people in Canberra who are active in the web and design community, who regularly present at conferences both local and internationally and have been published online and in print. So if you’re a UX professional and live in Canberra, thinking of moving here or visiting and aren’t already connected with our fantastic professional community then come along to one of our events or at least connect with some of our members online:

PS: This list may be amended in future to include people I inadvertently ommitted.

Slides from the Web Standard Group Meeting, August 19th (Sydney, Australia)

Sunday, August 24th, 2008 by Casey Glass

The WSG meeting last week was a great night with over 150 people in attendance.

There were three excellent presentations - and slides are now online for two (the third had a lot of video):

Presentation 1: “Findability: going beyond SEO”

Presenter: Radica Raeves

Search engine optimisation is usually the first subject that comes to mind when thinking about ways to improve the visibility of your organisation online. But it’s only a piece of the puzzle. In order to help the intended audience find, use and reuse your information, we need to look beyond SEO. Findability could help complete the puzzle. It’s a much broader concept, touching on almost every aspect of the web design and development process, where specialist fields intersect and overlap. We need to try and identify these elements of findability and “plug” them into the user-centred design workflow. It’s a big challenge… Can we connect the dots and bridge the gaps?”

http://www.slideshare.net/RRaeves/findability-going-beyond-seo-presentation/

Presentation 2: “One Web, No Go”

Presenter: Oliver Weidlich

With the improvements in mobile browsers and in the overall mobile user experience, what do we expect will change for mobile web users? Will we see a ‘one web’ approach? Oliver will talk about why the mobile and PC web experiences will increase in similarity, but still remain very different.

http://www.slideshare.net/oliverweidlich/wsg-august-2008-one-web-presentatio
n/

Presentation 3: “Building web apps for iPhones”

Presenters: Tim Lucas & Pete Ottery

Where to start when making a website targetted at iPhone users, including “Should you be?”. Frameworks…Javascript…Dev environments… and more. Tim Lucas & Pete Ottery share some experiences about creating iphone.news.com.au.

Slides: Coming, as soon as the 300mb file can be reduced

Oz-IA/2008: Australia’s Information Architecture Conference (Sydney, Australia)

Thursday, August 21st, 2008 by Casey Glass
September 20, 2008toSeptember 21, 2008

Oz-IA invites your participation to this premier Australian event on Information Architecture for the web. Join them in Sydney, Australia on the weekend of September 20th-21st, 2008, for two incredible days of presentations, panels, and networking with information architects from across Australia and beyond.

Who should attend?

  • Designers of navigation, organization, labeling, and search systems that help people find and manage information more successfully,
  • Librarians, webmasters, and content owners responsible for creating taxonomies and information architectures,
  • Application developers who design web and software solutions and select the technologies and staff to support them,
  • Project and business managers needing to understand the benefits and challenges of information architectures in electronic information spaces.

Conference Program

The call for short and advanced conference sessions has closed and was very successful. With more than 70 very interesting proposals on many great topics, and whittling the list down to just 22 sessions on the program was not an enviable task.

View the conference program…

Early bird registrations are $660, or $550 with discount code “uxnet08″.
Regular registrations are $770, or $660 with discount code “uxnet08″.