multi-touchpoint
TagPin badge with a multi-touchpoint design approach
Part of a new MEX series highlighting compelling case studies which catch our eye. Follow MEX @mexfeed or by signing-up for the weekly email newsletter.
Pins Collective is a $69 wearable digital badge which can be personalised to display diffe…
Principles for natively neighbourly multi-touchpoint experience design
If you listen to tech podcasts, you’ll likely already be familiar with curse of the keyword. When a presenter says ‘Ok Google’ or ‘Hey Siri’ on their podcast, thousands of listeners’ devices all over the world automatically initiate a search. It…
The MEX/16 conference: hidden paths to better UX
What are the new strategies and design methods to translate customer insight into next generation digital experiences?
The MEX/16 conference explores a question which transcends product categories and industry verticals.
It is set in the…
User story: the walker and the mapped lockscreen
The lock screen wallpaper of his iPhone (a 4S) was clearly a satellite photograph of some kind. Overlaid upon it was the angular, semi-transparent blue track line of a Google Maps-style route. Some operating systems enable mapping on the lock sc…
Experiencing the Apple Watch at retail
The Apple Watch occupied about 20 times more floorspace than the new MacBook when I visited the company’s Regent Street store in April 2015. The Watch’s display units stretch the full width of the store and are the first things a customer sees upo…
Microsoft’s multi-touchpoint machine starts to move
Theoretically, of course, Microsoft should be well placed to embrace and lead the next generation of multi-touchpoint digital experiences. It has always had interests in a broad range of computing platforms, from its heartland of the PC to the Xbo…
The demise of smarter rectangles
When a man like Sundar Pichai, responsible for the platform powering the majority of the world’s mobile devices, speaks up, one does well to take note. Android is understood today in the context of how well it performs on the little slabs of plast…
Living with a Moto 360 smartwatch and thoughts on a wearable future
I first wrote about the Moto 360 in December 2014. Suffice to say I was not impressed:
“The Moto 360 looked very different in real life to the media I’ve seen online. Without any attempt to show it in context, or market it as a luxury item,…