Minimalism [electronic resource] :Designing Simplicity / by Hartmut Obendorf.
by Obendorf, Hartmut [author.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
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BookSeries: Human-Computer Interaction Series: Publisher: London : Springer London, 2009.Description: online resource.ISBN: 9781848823716.Subject(s): Computer science | Computer Science | User Interfaces and Human Computer InteractionDDC classification: 005.437 | 4.019 Online resources: Click here to access online | Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| QA76.9.H85 (Browse shelf) | Available | ||||
| Long Loan | MAIN LIBRARY | QA76.9.U83 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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| QA76.9.H85 Computer-Aided Design of User Interfaces VI | QA76.9.H85 User-Centered Interaction Design Patterns for Interactive Digital Television Applications | QA76.9.H85 New Trends on Human–Computer Interaction | QA76.9.H85 Minimalism | QA76.9.H85 Awareness Systems | QA76.9.H85 Media Space 20 + Years of Mediated Life | QA76.9.H85 Multimodal Usability |
Designing for an Age of Complexity -- Minimalism: Introduction and Synopsis -- Defining Minimalism -- In Search of “Minimalism”— Roving in Art, Music and Elsewhere -- Minimalism for Interaction Design: a Proposal -- Rethinking Minimalism -- Minimalism, Industrial Design and HCI -- Minimalism, Simplicity and Rules of Design -- Applying Minimalism -- Detecting the Minimal -- Designing the Minimal -- Reflections on Minimalism -- Minimalism Revisited -- Minimal Aesthetics -- Unconnected Ends -- Conclusion.
In this age of complexity, simple, powerful systems are an ideal of interaction design. This book introduces minimalism and helps to make sense of reduction, and in doing so unravels some of the mysteries of simplicity. Minimalism becomes an essential tool to help visualise the simple, and to unveil and instantiate patterns for designing simplicity. Divided into five parts, the first delivers an introduction to the concept of minimalism and overviews the main themes covered in the book; Part two retraces the history of minimalism in art and music illustrating the breadth of concepts underlying works characterized as minimal, and showing the recurrence of these attributes in different disciplines. Four kinds of minimalism for interaction design are defined. The third part connects the concepts developed in the book to current thinking in HCI, examining norms, rules and guidelines. In part four, the simplicity of real designs is examined from a minimal perspective, and tools for different forms of reduction in design are discussed. The final section returns to more theoretical discussions of the notions of minimalism, re-evaluating the product and process threads for the changes brought about for the understanding of minimalism and the relation of aesthetics and minimalism in design. The book concludes with a look at issues and limitations that lie unanswered, and some of their possible resolutions.
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