Charles Lambdin, a UX Researcher at Intel Corporation, gave a talk on Presumptive Design (PrD) at CHIFOO (Computer Human Interaction Forum of Oregon) in January, 2016. Here’s the video of that talk – about 1:05.
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Part 6: Why is a Raven Like a Writing Desk? PrD and Lean UX
by Leo Frishberg. In this and several other posts, we address a corollary to Lewis Carroll’s famous riddle. In our case: “Why isn’t Presumptive Design like ?” In this post we tackle the comparison between Presumptive Design and Lean UX. See these posts for other comparisons. PrD is…
Part 5: Why is a Raven Like a Writing Desk? PrD and Cultural Probes
by Leo Frishberg. In this and several other posts, we address a corollary to Lewis Carroll’s famous riddle. In our case: “Why isn’t Presumptive Design like ?” In this post we tackle the comparison between Presumptive Design and Cultural Probes. See these posts for other comparisons. PrD is just…
Part 4: Why is a Raven Like a Writing Desk? PrD and Usability Testing
by Leo Frishberg. In this and several other posts, we address a corollary to Lewis Carroll’s famous riddle. In our case: “Why isn’t Presumptive Design like ?” In this post we tackle the comparison between Presumptive Design and Usability Testing. See these posts for other comparisons. PrD is…
Part 3: Why is a Raven Like a Writing Desk? PrD and Design Thinking
by Leo Frishberg. In this and several other posts, we address a corollary to Lewis Carroll’s famous riddle. In our case: “Why isn’t Presumptive Design like ?” In this post we tackle the comparison between Presumptive Design and Design Thinking. See these posts for other comparisons. PrD is…
Part 2: Why is a Raven Like a Writing Desk? PrD and Rapid Prototyping
by Leo Frishberg. In this and several other posts, we address a corollary to Lewis Carroll’s famous riddle. In our case: “Why isn’t Presumptive Design like ?” In this post we tackle the comparison between Presumptive Design and Rapid Prototyping. See these posts for other comparisons. PrD is…
Part 1: Why is a Raven Like a Writing Desk? PrD and Concept Testing
by Leo Frishberg. As you may recognize, this entry’s title is a reference to Lewis Carroll’s Mad Tea Party scene in which the Hatter poses the riddle to Alice and then ultimately refuses to answer it. By Carroll’s own admission, he never intended to provide an answer, but that didn’t stop…
A Tale of Two Errors – Part 2
by Leo Frishberg. In the first part of this topic, we outlined the notion of the pessimistic viewpoint about error, namely that if you are trying to predict the future you want to eliminate as much error as possible in the data you rely on. We referenced Roger Martin’s The…
A Tale of Two Errors – Part 1
by Leo Frishberg. When Jim walked into the meeting he knew it was going to be a tough 60 minutes. The product definition team was seated around the table waiting to hear the latest results. What Jim had to tell them wasn’t going to be an easy pill to swallow:…
The Real Problem Is the Problem – Part 2
by Leo Frishberg. In Part 1 of this discussion, we suggest one of the greatest challenges we face when proposing something new is to truly explore the problem space that is linked to our intention. Recall we suggested that for many organizations, stating the intention is akin to defining the…