PixallusPixallus
  • Home
  • About
    • Announcements
  • Services
    • Website Services
    • Managed WordPress
    • Get Support
    • Projekt Manager
    • WordPress Hosting
      • Web Hosting Plans
      • Buy A Domain
      • Transfer A Domain
      • SSL Certificates
      • Email Security
    • Website Templates
    • Submit RFP
    • Affiliates
    • Tech News
  • Portfolio
  • Log In

User Experience Psychology And Performance: SmashingConf Videos

  • , Smashing Mag
  • August 1, 2018
PrevPrevious
NextNext
sarah-drasner-opt_kaxhos.png
User Experience Psychology And Performance: SmashingConf Videos

User Experience Psychology And Performance: SmashingConf Videos

The Smashing Editorial

2018-08-01T13:30:35+02:002018-08-02T08:33:10+00:00

Today, we’d like to shine a light on two videos from our archives as we explore two very different approaches to User Experience (UX). The first explores how we relate our websites to the needs and situations of our visitors, trying to meet them where they are emotionally. The second is a detailed technical exploration into how we measure and track the data around performance as it relates to user experience.

The second video may seem unrelated to the first video; however, while the collecting and analyzing of data might seem very impersonal, the improvements we can make based on the information makes a real difference to the experience of the people we build our sites to serve.

Designing Powerful User Experiences With Psychology

Recorded at the SmashingConf in San Francisco earlier this year, Joe Leech explains how psychology impacts user experience. Joe explains the frustrations people using our products face, and the things happening in their everyday lives and environment that can make interacting with our websites and applications difficult. He goes on to help us understand how we can design in a way to help these visitors rather than frustrate them.

How’s The UX On The Web, Really?

Once you have created a great user experience, how do you know that it is really working well? Especially in terms of site performance, we can track how people are using our sites and examine that data to see what is really happening.

At the SmashingConf in London, Ilya Grigorik was the Mystery Speaker and spoke about the ways to assess performance in real terms, and benchmark your application against other destinations on the web.

Enjoyed listening to these talks? There are many more SmashingConf videos on Vimeo. We’re also getting ready for the upcoming SmashingConf in New York — see you there? 😉

With so much happening on the web, what should we really pay attention to? At SmashingConf New York 2018 🇺🇸 we’ll explore everything from PWAs, font loading best practices, web performance and eCommerce UX optimization, to refactoring CSS, design workflows and convincing your clients. With Sarah Drasner, Dan Mall, Sara Soueidan, Jason Grigsby, and many other speakers. Oct 23–24.


Check the speakers →

SmashingConf New York 2018, with Dan Mall, Sara Soueidan, Sarah Drasner and many others.

Smashing Editorial(ra, il)

 

This *post* was originally published on **this site**

PrevPreviousElementor vs Beaver Builder Page Builder: Which Should You Choose?
NextOn Switching Code EditorsNext
Search
Close

Share this page

Share on facebook
Share on google
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on email
sendinblue

Cybersecurity Communities: Defending IT Collaboratively (Contributed)

February 19, 2019

Hiring the best and brightest cybersecurity talent will always be difficult for state and local governments. They have to compete with private-sector firms that can

Read More »

Social Cards as a Service

February 19, 2019

I love the idea of programmatically generated images. That power is close at hand these days for us front-end developers, thanks to the concept of

Read More »

Don’t Get Clever with Login Forms

February 19, 2019

As time goes on I find myself increasingly annoyed with login forms. As password managers like 1Password (which is what I use) and Chrome’s password manager

Read More »

How @supports Works

February 18, 2019

CSS has a neat feature that allows us to test if the browser supports a particular property or property:value combination before applying a block of

Read More »

instant.page

February 18, 2019

instant.page Amazon and others found that 100 milliseconds of latency is responsible for 1% in sales. But latency on the web is hard to overcome.

Read More »

IE10-Compatible Grid Auto-Placement with Flexbox

February 18, 2019

If you work on web applications that support older browsers, and have lusted after CSS Grid from the sidelines like I have, I have some

Read More »
PrevPrevious
NextNext

© 2017-2018 Pixallus

Terms of Service

Facebook Twitter Linkedin