Unboxing The Nokia Lumia 800

The Lumia has one of the most beautiful typography i've seen on a phone. It makes content beautiful, no ornamentation, no  unneccerarry gradients, shadows or colors.  

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love the ♥ icon when the battery is running low. 

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I've been playing with this phone only a day and i'm i love it, I believe if there is anyone who can compete with iOS on the design front, it's Windows Phone 7, and not Android. Android really feels cheap immitation at best. The Lumia 800 gave me the same feeling I got when I first saw the iPhone. I wanted to go show it everyone. 

The WP7 is a refreshingly fresh approach to mobile OS. It sure has its quirks, iOS did too. 

Will try and add a detailed lazy review soon. 

Design Explorations by 37signals

Design Explorations
A series of design explorations across 37signals products
By Jason Zimdars, designer at 37signals

One of the first projects for me as a new designer at 37signals is to take a fresh look at a series of features and screens in the company’s applications. These individual pieces are ones that we know can be better but haven’t made it onto anyone’s plate yet. Much like the Highrise Contacts exploration I did a couple of months ago, I’ll be looking at each piece intensively for a short period of time with the aim of improving and refining the experience. And also like the Highrise piece, I’ll be carefully documenting the process, including the directions that didn’t quite work. So stay tuned for more like this in the coming weeks.

I just went through one of the design process, its very similar to what i usually end up doing. Using some basic design principals to iterate through design options. I just keep building on top of a design. It might be interesting to just reach a design exploration to its conclusion and then start afresh...

Why You Should Not Copy

A great post on why businesses and especially startups should not copy.

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Here’s the problem with copying: Copying skips understanding. Understanding is how you grow. You have to understand why something works or why something is how it is. When you copy it, you miss that. You just repurpose the last layer instead of understanding all the layers underneath.
 
The article is referring to ideas and business models, but I think *interface design is an example more people can relate to*. Have you seen an interface that was obviously copied from someone else’s interface? The copy usually lacks depth and detail. They miss the spacing, the proportions, the relationship between colors and objects and buttons and links. It’s usually pretty close, but there’s something not right about it.

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So bottom line: Copying hurts you. You miss out on what makes something good. Instead, try to be exposed to a variety of perspectives and points of view. Take whatever you find useful and leave the rest behind. Fill in the gaps with your own ideas. In the end you have make your own way forward.

im my everyday job, so many times people ask by giving examples of other sites and product UI to just do it like them, they ask - this looks like it worked for them, why cant we just do that? Im sure many user experience designers and UI people out there working in startup and small companies will relateto this.

for me there are clearly two aspect to learning something from successful designs and great UI.

1. Understand the pattern, don't copy the UI or the design.
2. see how you can improvize and then test to validate.

via SvN and OnStartups

Beautiful Coffee Tables

I've been eagerly waiting to do up my new apartment, and have been on the lookout for great furniture ideas and designs. This morning I came across some beautiful coffee and side tables. check them out...

I gotta have the 'De Santis Coffee Table' (the one in black with white hand paintings). It costs $899.00!! *makes mental note: find someone locally who can create the same for you in less than half the price*