Комментарии:
In the video, did they mention any specific case studies or examples where applying psychological principles to UX and UI design led to notable improvements in user engagement or satisfaction? If so, could you provide a summary of one such case?"
ОтветитьThis is what you let CHAT GPT write your script
Ответитьwhat's up with the audio?
ОтветитьI'm not sure why this talk is so phenomenal..? Nothing new to me to be honest. And he's also not the best presenter.
ОтветитьThankyou very much sir 🎉
ОтветитьThat's so good
ОтветитьAfter a couple of years, this still feels fresh. Brilliant 🔥
ОтветитьGood insights by speaker and well-delivered.
ОтветитьWhat a mess
Ответить😂😂🤣👍 I think he missed about 10 books about user experience before coming to colors.
Ответитьlove it!
ОтветитьAm I the only one who didn't see the food?
Ответитьjesus that's bleak
ОтветитьWas waiting for something on ux but the video ended
Ответитьvery dead crowd, looks like they were all sleeping. the psychology discussed was very fundamental to my liking.
Ответить.
ОтветитьPhenomenal lecture by Harrish Murugesan on User Experience fundamentals. 🙌👍🙏🏼
Ответитьsuch an awesome insight he's given us
ОтветитьWhat is he trying to tell actually 🤔
ОтветитьI don't know why people need to complicate UX?
My experience of this talk was bad: SIMPLE.
The most useless UX Design lecture I’ve ever attended
ОтветитьLove the metafor with the casino, very good comparison with how social media works
ОтветитьThe sound going in and out is what happens when a developer tries to become a public speaker on UX
Ответитьwhat is with the audio?
ОтветитьTechnology has turned us into a bunch of dogs.
ОтветитьThis presentation was cringeworthy and hard to watch. When he referred to Pavlov by his full name and then
preceded to describe conditioning as if we’ve never heard of it, I knew it
was time to watch something else.
This guy belongs on the bottom on the food chain of business and product development…
Ответитьkindly improve your presentation skills don't waste the time of view
ers.
very shallow
ОтветитьRed colour : TED
ОтветитьNah those alpha nerd sideburns…
Ответитьthis is what happens when an indian tries to fake accent
ОтветитьSound is pathetic cannt hear anything
ОтветитьTruly a psychology about the UX i haven't been introduced or learnt from anyone else in my life! thank u so much harish sir and the orgganizer of this event TEDx..✨❤✔
truly something new!
Bro.. what a bad presentation skills
ОтветитьThis is what happens when a software developer teaches about UX
ОтветитьThis video content is not rightly chosen , there is so much other oncepts to emphasize about ux but i feel the content is not rightly curated. But i do aprreciate your efforts.
ОтветитьGreat
ОтветитьThat last quote hit me hard😂
ОтветитьThe UX on this video wasn't good in the beginning i.e. the volume.
ОтветитьAnd when a prof. designer whatched it : " Damn he did the very same fundamental mistake, UX is not just for interfaces" ... lol
ОтветитьMost useless presentation ever
ОтветитьThis is the most useless lecture on UI/UX design I've ever watched. Like he says "look at Google and Yahoo websites. See? They are different! Ok let's move to the next point..." No explanation why they are different and what is the aim of Google showing these things and Yahoo showing that things.
He won't try to continue his thoughts and present a kind of research or interesting things he discovered.
this was crazy good and interesting
ОтветитьYou sound so fake, Your accent sounds like a made-up one.
ОтветитьSound 👎👎👎
ОтветитьThis guy is not great. His analysis is pretty flawed at times such as the breakdown of the color red.
Red is a color that initiates or stimulates a human, probably even animals to pay attention! This is not because Stop signs are red. Stop signs are red because red is a color that is hard coded through evolution to signify danger/pay attention. A major reason is that blood is red. Also fire and many poisonous insects and snakes employ red as a "pay attention" color.