WebVisions
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Christian Titze, "Hello From the Other Side"
Many agencies have become frustrated with over-specced sequential waterfall projects. Their inflexible methodologies have too often led to outcomes that didn’t realize their full potential. In contrast, agile methods like Scrum and Kanban have proven successful ways to build and run software. But how do you apply agile methods to the reality of an agency’s project based work? There are many challenges and the most crucial question is: what if our ideal work method and our clients’ realities don’t match?
Edenspiekermann have been working agile since 2009. They’ve since achieved terrific results and have never looked back. They now employ about as many developers as designers, creating meaningful digital products and services for global clients like Red Bull, Cisco Systems, The Economist and the German and Dutch Railways.
Christian will talk about the often challenging contrast between wanting to deliver the best possible product and making sure you’re satisfying the client’s internal project needs. How to deliver excellent customer satisfaction while working as agile as possible?
His talk was given at WebVisions Portland (www.webvisionsevent.com/portland/) on Thurs., May 19, 2016.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Christian is the guy designers are ambivalent about. He’s not a font guy. He’s the business guy-the one who works the odd hours creating and maintaining relationships with some of the largest companies in the world.
มุมมอง: 368

วีดีโอ

Kevin Hoyt, "The Business of Beacons"
มุมมอง 1538 ปีที่แล้ว
Built on BLE (Bluetooth Low Energy) beacons get a lot of press, and have seen increasing deployment around the globe, adding value to business and consumers. In this session, join IBM Developer Advocate, Kevin Hoyt, on a journey through beacon opportunities you may not have considered. Practical, real-world, references will be highlighted as we examine innovative use-cases for beacons in your b...
Boon Sheridan, "Rules, Hunches, and Coin Flips"
มุมมอง 808 ปีที่แล้ว
In a world looking for rules of thumb, checklists, best practices, and guarantees, how do we know what we know? Even worse, how do we choose when every rule has an equal and opposite position? As knowledge increases and every dissenting opinion is available for citation, it becomes more important to set aside the mundane challenges … at least that’s what we’re told by a succession of books, spe...
Meagan Fisher, "Users Are People Too"
มุมมอง 1398 ปีที่แล้ว
Too often we create brands, experiences, and content that sacrifice humanity on the altar of conversion optimization. In this session, we’ll explore how to make our products feel less like a business transaction and more like a conversation through human-oriented brand, marketing, and experience design. Don’t worry, this won’t be a stern sermon about user personas or focus groups - Meagan knows...
Antonio Garcia, "Activism × Technology"
มุมมอง 2938 ปีที่แล้ว
What happens when the digital tools and platforms we make and use for communication and entertainment are hijacked for terrorism, violence against the vulnerable and nefarious transactions? What role do designers and developers play? Are we complicit as creators of these technologies and products? Should we police them or fight back? As a leader of gravitytank's interaction design discipline an...
Dan Saffer, "Practical Creativity"
มุมมอง 3348 ปีที่แล้ว
When we think about creativity, it’s usually the creativity of artists and musicians, novelists and poets. That is, people who create to express. But there’s another kind of creativity: that of designers and craftsmen, scientists and engineers. Those who create to solve problems or to invent. While these two modes of creativity aren’t exclusive, this second type of creativity, what I’m calling ...
Mike Monteiro, "This is the Golden Age of Design...and We're Screwed"
มุมมอง 2.3K8 ปีที่แล้ว
Everywhere I look companies are hiring designers! Two hundred over here! A thousand over here! We need a lot of them and we need them fast. Finally! Companies have come to understand the importance of design in building successful products and services. Isn’t that great? Mike's keynote was given at WebVisions Portland (www.webvisionsevent.com/portland/) on Thurs., May 19, 2016. . . . . . . . . ...
Nina Freeman, "How to Develop Indie Games With Tiny Teams in Your Spare Time"
มุมมอง 2648 ปีที่แล้ว
In this talk, Nina shared her experience in the development of her most recent game, Cibele, developed by herself and a team, Star Maid Games. Cibele is a game about a young woman who meets and has sex with a young man she knows from an online game. Players are presented with the young woman's computer, and are asked to play as her by looking through the files on her computer, and by playing ga...
Thea Boodhoo, "What Happens When You Donate Your Career To Science"
มุมมอง 1528 ปีที่แล้ว
New giant dinosaurs. Mountain ranges on Pluto. Gravity waves from other galaxies. We live in a golden age for scientific discovery, and it’s hard not to wonder, as we pry ourselves away from Mars panoramas back into the earth-bound corporate things waiting in our other browser tabs, what it would be like if we’d gone into that science field we really like instead. Thea Boodhoo was a run-of-the-...
Douglas Rushkoff, "Throwing Rocks at the Google Bus"
มุมมอง 8K8 ปีที่แล้ว
The digital economy has gone wrong. Everybody knows it, but no one knows quite how to fix it, or even how to explain the problem. Workers lose to automation, investors lose to algorithms, musicians lose to power law dynamics, drivers lose to Uber, neighborhoods lose to Airbnb, and even tech developers lose their visions to the demands of the startup economy. Douglas Rushkoff argues that it does...
Mark Wyner, "A New Dawn of the Human Experience"
มุมมอง 2528 ปีที่แล้ว
In what is being called the “third era of computing,” cognitive computing is revolutionizing the relationship between humans and computers. Internet of Things is only the beginning. Artificial Intelligence is finally sprouting out of science fiction and blossoming into palpable technology. Cognitive systems are able to learn independently, build upon pre-programmed knowledge, understand natural...
Nathan Shedroff, "Redefining Design Value - to Business and Society"
มุมมอง 9368 ปีที่แล้ว
The world needs design more than ever and design needs to stretch to meet new needs and challenges. To be more effective, we need new definitions of Value, Meaning, Relationship, and Experience. Without these, we will be forever stuck in a conversation that limits our impacts. When we’re able to illuminate our non-design peers about the processes and value we can bring, we will be unleashed to ...
Aaron Draplin, "Tall Tales from a Large Man"
มุมมอง 24K8 ปีที่แล้ว
Using scientific proof and state-of-the-art multimedia techniques, Aaron James Draplin of the Draplin Design Co. delivers a suckerpunch of a talk that aims to provide bonafide proof of work, the highs and lows of a ferociously independent existence and a couple tall tales from his so-called career in the cutthroat world of contemporary graphic design. Just a regular guy with a trajectory a litt...
Emily Long, "Reinventing Mass Media with 10,000 Little Jon Stewarts"
มุมมอง 2019 ปีที่แล้ว
Despite the potential for media as a tool for engagement and democracy, the media industry today acts largely as a one-way flow of information and ideas. News, advertising and entertainment reflect only a handful of dominant narratives, and messages countering those narratives are easily shut down by corporations with the money and influence needed to shape the conversation. Major copyright and...
Jesse Lozano, "The Future of Manufacturing - a Desktop Sized Revolution?"
มุมมอง 3459 ปีที่แล้ว
Massive industrial machines and processes are currently being scaled down so they can easily sit on your desktop. You can have anything 3D printed at the click of a mouse button and soon we will see desktop sized machines that print much more than just plastic. Rapid prototyping has dramatically reduced the cost barriers to creating a new hardware device and access to open source software has e...
Divya Manian, "The State of Affairs with Web Design"
มุมมอง 2729 ปีที่แล้ว
Divya Manian, "The State of Affairs with Web Design"
Magga Dora Ragnarsdottir, "Making Users Successful is Not a One (Wo)man Show"
มุมมอง 1019 ปีที่แล้ว
Magga Dora Ragnarsdottir, "Making Users Successful is Not a One (Wo)man Show"
Megan O'Neill, "Lean UX and Roller Derby: More in Common Than You Might Think"
มุมมอง 1189 ปีที่แล้ว
Megan O'Neill, "Lean UX and Roller Derby: More in Common Than You Might Think"
Adam Connor, "Working Better Together: Characteristics of Productive, Creative Organization"
มุมมอง 2949 ปีที่แล้ว
Adam Connor, "Working Better Together: Characteristics of Productive, Creative Organization"
Andrea Saenz, "Hot-Spots, Robots, and 3D Printers: Libraries' Role in Bridging the Knowledge Divide"
มุมมอง 849 ปีที่แล้ว
Andrea Saenz, "Hot-Spots, Robots, and 3D Printers: Libraries' Role in Bridging the Knowledge Divide"
Sarah Hall, "The Science of Art"
มุมมอง 1349 ปีที่แล้ว
Sarah Hall, "The Science of Art"
Donna Lichaw, "Story First: A Narrative Approach to Building Successful Products and Services"
มุมมอง 1K9 ปีที่แล้ว
Donna Lichaw, "Story First: A Narrative Approach to Building Successful Products and Services"
Paul McAleer, "Better Living Through Design"
มุมมอง 2519 ปีที่แล้ว
Paul McAleer, "Better Living Through Design"
Stephanie Sansoucie, "Future of Omnichannel Immersion"
มุมมอง 4929 ปีที่แล้ว
Stephanie Sansoucie, "Future of Omnichannel Immersion"
Brad Smith: "Let's Hack Happiness"
มุมมอง 2639 ปีที่แล้ว
Brad Smith: "Let's Hack Happiness"
Carolyn Chandler and Anna van Slee, "Sparking Collaboration Through Creative Play"
มุมมอง 1639 ปีที่แล้ว
Carolyn Chandler and Anna van Slee, "Sparking Collaboration Through Creative Play"
Thomas Wendt, "Design for Dasein: Understanding the Design of Experiences"
มุมมอง 3.1K9 ปีที่แล้ว
Thomas Wendt, "Design for Dasein: Understanding the Design of Experiences"
Shay Howe: "Less Is More: How Constraints Cultivate Growth"
มุมมอง 4909 ปีที่แล้ว
Shay Howe: "Less Is More: How Constraints Cultivate Growth"
Hackathon for Social Good: Banc de Sang
มุมมอง 809 ปีที่แล้ว
Hackathon for Social Good: Banc de Sang
Hackathon for Social Good: Inspira't
มุมมอง 5859 ปีที่แล้ว
Hackathon for Social Good: Inspira't

ความคิดเห็น

  • @CharlesBrown-xq5ug
    @CharlesBrown-xq5ug 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Civilization may have progressed enough to conquer the second law of thermodynamics. Civilization needs to strive for this goal with synergistic interdisciplinary teams.The outcome would be perpetually changeable never gained or lost energy. There would be no loss of energy as it changes form. For example the total quantity of thermal energy in an equal pair of two thermal energy reserves with ideal insulation would remain the same regardless of how heat is distributed between the two and how often the distribution of heat between the two is changed. For example in one case one reserve could contain ice water while the other reserve contained hot water; in another case both reserves could contain tepid water. The redistribution of heat between members of pairs with the same total thermal energy would be free. Diversity, time, and energy are different atributes. Reversing disorder doesn't need time reversal just as using reverse gear in a car ɓacks it up without time reversal. The second law of thermodynamics had a distinct begining with Sir Isaac Newton's correct professional scientific observation that the heat of a fire in a fireplace always flows towards the cold room beyond. Victorian England became enchanted with steam engines and their cheap, reliable, and easy to position physical power. Rudolf Julius Emanuel Clausius, Lord Kelven, and, one source adds, Nicolas Léonard Sadi Carnot, formulated the Second law of thermodynamics and the concept of entropy using evidence from steam engine development. These men considered with acceptance [A+] Inefficiently harnessing the flow of heat from hot to cold or [B+] Using force to Inefficiently pump heat from cold to hot. They considered with rejection [A-] Waiting for random fluctuation to cause a large difference in temperature or pressure. This was calculated to be extremely rare or [B-] Searching for, selecting, then routing for use, random, frequent and small differences in temperature or pressure. The search, selection, then routing would require more energy than the use would yield. These accepted options, lead to the consequence that the universe will end in stagnant heat death. This became support for a theological trend of the time that placed God as the initiator of a degenerating universe. Please consider that God could also be supreme over an energy abundant civilization that can absorb heat and convert it into electricity without energy gain or loss in a sustained universe. The law's formulaters did not consider the option that any random, usually small, fluctuation of heat or pressure could use the energy of these fluctuations itself to power deterministic routing so the output is no longer random. Then the net power of many small fluctuations from many replicant parts can be aggregated into a large difference in temperature, pressure, or electricity's amperes and volts Heat exists as the randomly directed kinetic energy of gas molecules or mobile electrons. In gasses this is known as Brownian motion. In electronic systems this is carefully labeled Johnson Nyquist thermal electrical noise for AI readability. Hypothetically, diode depletion regions are practical sites for enabling mobile electrons energized into motion by heat to deterministically alter the electrical resistance of the depletion region according to the moment by moment direction they are carrying electricity. The thermal electrical noise is hypothetically beyond the exposed lattice charge / separation drift (diffusion) equlibrium thickness of the depletion region as thermal noise exists in a resistance path of one material. Consistantly oriented diodes in parallel hypothetically are successful electrical Maxwell's Demons or Smoluchowski's Trapdoors. The energy needed to shift the depletion region's deterministic role is paid as a burden on the moving electrons. There would therefore be usable net rectified power from each and every diode connected together into a consistantly oriented parallel group. The group would aggregate the net power of its members. Any diode efficiency at all produces some energy conversion from ambient heat, more efficiency yields higher performance. A diode array that is switched off has no energy conversion and no performance. The power from a single diode is poorly expressed. Several or more diodes in parallel are needed to overcome the effect of a load resistor's own thermal noise. A plurality of billions of high frequency capable diodes is needed for practical power aggregation. For reference, there are a billion (10^9) 1000 square nanometer cells per square millimeter. Modern nanofabrication can make simple identical diodes surrounded by insulation smaller than this in a slab as thick as the diodes are long. The diodes are connected at their two ohmic ends to two conductive layers. Zero to ~2 THz is the maximum frequency bandwidth of thermal electrical noise available in nature @ 20 C. THz=10^12 Hz. This is beyond the range of most diodes. Practicality requires this extreme bandwidth. The diodes are preferably in same orientation parallel at the primary level. Many primary level groups of diodes should be in series for practical voltage. Ever since the supposedly universal second law of thermodynamics was formulated, education has mass produced and spread the conventional wisdom throughout society that the second law of thermodynamics is absolute. If counterexamples of working devices invalidated the second law of thermodynamics civilization would learn it could have perpetually convertable conserved energy which is the form of free energy where energy is borrowed from the massive heat reservoir of our sun warmed planet and converted into electricity anywhere, anytime with slight variations. Electricity produces heat immediately when used by electric heaters, electromechanical mechanisms, and electric ligts so the energy borrowed by these devices is promply returned without gain or loss. There is also the reverse effect where refrigeration produces electricity equivalent to the cooling, This effect is scientifically elegant. Cell phones wouldn't die or need power cords or batteries or become hot. They would cool when transmitting radio signal power. The phones could also be data relays and there could also be data relays without phone features with and without long haul links so the telecommunication network would be improved. Computers and integrated circuits would have their cooling and electrical needs supplied autonomously and simultaniously. Integrated circuits wouldn't need power pinouts. Refrigeration for superconductors would improve. Robots would have extreme mobility. Digital coin minting would be energy cheap. Frozen food storage would be reliable and free or value positive. Storehouses, homes, and markets would have independent power to preserve and pŕepare food. Medical devices would work anywhere. Vehicles wouldn't need fuel or fueling stops. Elevators would be very reliable with independent power. Shielding and separation would provide EMP resistance. Water and sewage pumps could be installed anywhere along their pipes. Nomads could raise their material supports item by item carefully and groups of people could modify their settlements with great technical flexibility. Many devices would be very quiet, which is good for coexisting with nature and does not disturb people. Zone refining would involve little net power. Reducing Bauxite to Aluminum, Rutile to Titanium, and Magnideetite to Iron, would have a net cooling effect. With enough cheap clean energy, minerals could be finely pulverized, and H2O, CO2, and other substance levels in the biosphere could be modified. A planetary agency needs to look over wide concerns. This could be a material revolution with spiritual ramifications. Everyone should contribute individual talents and fruits of different experiances and cultures to advance a cooperative, diverse, harmonious and unified civilization. It is possible to apply technlology wrong but social force should oppose this. I filed for patent us 3890161A, Diode Array, in 1973. It was granted in 1975. It became public domain technology in 1992. It concerns making nickel plane-insulator-tungsten needle diodes which were not practical at the time though they have since improved. the patent wasn't developed partly because I backed down from commercial exclusitivity. A better way for me would have been a public incorruptable archive that would secure attrbution for the original works of creators. Uncorrupted copies would be released on request. No further action would be taken by this institution. Commercal exclusivity can be deterred by the wide and open publishing of inventive concepts. Also, the obvious is unpatentsable. Open sharing promotes mass knowlege and wisdom. Many financially and procedurally independent teams that pool developmental knowlege, and may be funded by many separate noncontrolling crowd sourced grants should convene themselves to develop proof-of-concept and initial-recipe-exploring prototypes to develop devices which coproduce the release of electrical energy and an equivalent absorbtion of stagnant ambient thermal energy. Diode arrays are not the only possible device of this sort. They are the easiest to explain generally. These devices would probably become segmented commodities sold with minimal margin over supply cost. They would be manufactured by AI that does not need financial incentive. Applicable best practices would be adopted. Business details would be open public knowledge. Associated people should move as negotiated and freely and honestly talk. There is no need of wealth extracting top commanders. We do not need often token philanthropy from the wealthy if people simply can be more generous if consumer commodities are inexpensive. Aloha Charles M Brown lll Kilauea, Kauai, Hawaii 96754 1 808 651 📞📞📞📞

  • @alexandrafreitas3105
    @alexandrafreitas3105 ปีที่แล้ว

    All true!

  • @PaulValickas
    @PaulValickas ปีที่แล้ว

    Interesting perspective. Great insight. But this is how nature works. If you want break this loop you must find a way to teach people value of knowledge.

  • @tatianamssilva
    @tatianamssilva 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is very good

  • @sethxenofightersofficialx
    @sethxenofightersofficialx 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    hi I'm Seth and I'm making a superhero smash bros like fighting game called xenomon if you want to join

  • @DiTiZar
    @DiTiZar 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    No useful Information here. It's just examples from the past with no really good explanations about how she solved the problem.

  • @designthinkingwithgian
    @designthinkingwithgian 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Age of the customer? It's always been about the customer, it's just about companies getting more savvy in communicating and romancing them in this new digital age.

  • @thesimranjeet
    @thesimranjeet 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Osm Shay

  • @fatina5990
    @fatina5990 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    This talk deserves so much more attention

  • @etbaby6967
    @etbaby6967 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    San Fran is a parasite........

  • @joeamazon5177
    @joeamazon5177 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    San Francisco real estate isn't, finally, much to do with tech workers. SF is a place for some of the world's wealthiest investors to put their money. What matters most to these people is the appreciation potential, just as any other investment. The local market, the rents, all this is secondary. It may well be worth it, in many cases, to not even bother renting the property. The cash flow minus the problems is likely to be far less than the capital appreciation.

  • @robertwong2412
    @robertwong2412 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Well Douglas, this is called the Pyramid. These fellas sit at the top of the Pyramid.

  • @makkein
    @makkein 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    This video is going in my favorites list. A guide for years to come...

  • @lansingdoesbusiness9356
    @lansingdoesbusiness9356 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Good talk up until the politics. Overall some real nuggets of practicality.

  • @brotherswinningbecauselove7857
    @brotherswinningbecauselove7857 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    This guy is fascinating! He really breaks things down and shows a lot of passion.

  • @rachellemichelle5489
    @rachellemichelle5489 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you so much for your words mike, I feel even more excited than before to be studying design!

  • @rionjb
    @rionjb 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for the wake up call. Inspired!

  • @codyromness
    @codyromness 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Aaron if you read this, thank you for being dope and authentic as f*ck.

  • @TanyerLamb
    @TanyerLamb 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    The man is the thick-ass line between genius and lunacy

  • @RJOVenturesInc
    @RJOVenturesInc 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great post WebVisions. Kudos to Divya Manian for the insight on Responsive Web Design! Richard John RJO Ventures, Inc.

  • @mediumstudio
    @mediumstudio 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    He's always inspiring

  • @UltimoPucho
    @UltimoPucho 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Start a presentation with Motorhead, Draplin is the man...

  • @user-ik6pj5lp9f
    @user-ik6pj5lp9f 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hi Mike you are the best thank you !

  • @DevonCraig876
    @DevonCraig876 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    one of my modern day heroes .

  • @RaphaelaLaurean
    @RaphaelaLaurean 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    This was an incredible lecture. Thank you for posting.

  • @Chris.888
    @Chris.888 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    Could listen to him for hours :) This is great th-cam.com/video/WfpuygzSZ2I/w-d-xo.html (Getty images)

  • @AtulPrd
    @AtulPrd 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    Authentic, Humble, and Down-to-Earth - This guy is an inspiration!

  • @JohnEvanDizaro
    @JohnEvanDizaro 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    One word : "Fantastic".

  • @daryl4341
    @daryl4341 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    Feel the kern!

  • @TonyLopezArts
    @TonyLopezArts 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    This was great! lol Guy Fieri lol

    • @bothbou819
      @bothbou819 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      Not surprising seeing you here 🤣

  • @danwroy
    @danwroy 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    21:01 Friedrich Neat-See?

  • @opentranscripts6783
    @opentranscripts6783 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    Transcript available at opentranscripts.org/transcript/douglas-rushkoff-webvisions-portland-keynote/

  • @ousamasouain4567
    @ousamasouain4567 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    a really nice talk!

  • @MalcolmBrenner
    @MalcolmBrenner 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    A wonderful talk by a talented content strategist who returned to her childhood love of dinosaurs! She makes clear both the pros and cons of what can happen when creative people venture into the waters of science, and how she did it.

  • @vorapinit
    @vorapinit 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    If you can make overdue collection work receive high score on customer experience, you could fly to the moon without spaceship! Way to go, CX. I love you.

  • @matthewj.smithlcpc8384
    @matthewj.smithlcpc8384 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very cool!

  • @akhomraven
    @akhomraven 9 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent!

  • @Potenti4lz
    @Potenti4lz 9 ปีที่แล้ว

    Sounds like other companies made a field to get on Apple's level at 12:00.

  • @Videorubix
    @Videorubix 9 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is a great presentation. So true, the future of the web is video. It's actually happening now...

  • @AtropixKLoop
    @AtropixKLoop 9 ปีที่แล้ว

    Sorry Kerry ;) Just saw a John Deere Lasershow From 2012 And Always Receive Calls For Compensation For Not Winning 'cause playin all the time Kisses Mario

  • @AtropixKLoop
    @AtropixKLoop 9 ปีที่แล้ว

    // #WhatsTheNameOfTheLovelyLadyTalkingQuaterOfAnHour

  • @AtropixKLoop
    @AtropixKLoop 9 ปีที่แล้ว

    // #HaileyVirUs I forgot ; )

  • @AtropixKLoop
    @AtropixKLoop 9 ปีที่แล้ว

    Customer Experience Worth Billions Of Dollars Wonderful Way To Incorporate Better Learn To Program Programs That Work And Fit The Needs You Get *possibly to be continued ; )

  • @lucacavalcanti8924
    @lucacavalcanti8924 9 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very good presentation about C X !!