September 6, 2022 Smashing Newsletter: Issue #369
This newsletter issue was sent out to 223,446 subscribers on Tuesday, September 6, 2022.
Editorial
Over the last few years, I’ve acquired a slightly strange but helpful habit. I question absolutely every single design decision, and try to find a purpose and intent that it drives. Why do we display error messages under text boxes? Do we really need to use a mega-menu at all? Have we measured just how reliable is our inline validation is in the first place?
In the past, I would often jump into design with both feet, experimenting with ideas on a busy canvas, with plenty of moodboards and semi-finished mock-ups all over the place. These days I spend a lot of time in a text editor first. We think and establish design KPIs, accessible color schemes, font budgets, performance goals and carbon footprint emission targets before a single pixel is drawn on the screen.
And I love relying on wonderful UX tools and resources that help me drive the right decisions confidently. That’s what this newsletter is all about — some useful UX gems that hopefully will help you in your work as well.
If you want to dive a bit deeper, there are still a few spots left for the Live Interface Design Patterns UX Training, a 4-weeks-long online UX training on complex UX challenges, and how to deal with them confidently. I can’t wait to see you there!
Greetings from the SmashingConf Freiburg,
— Vitaly (@vitalyf)
1. Color Scale Interpolation
Imagine you want to visualize data on a choropleth map. Let’s say the unemployment rate in US counties. Interpolation plays an important role when doing so. The method assigns each of your data values to a certain color and heavily influences how the data is perceived and how well your statement is communicated. But how to get interpolation right? Lisa Charlotte Muth summarized everything you need to know.
Depending on the interpolation you choose, your data will get segmented into differently-sized parts and the values will get colored differently. Lisa explores the effect that different interpolation has on your data visualization and gives tips for when to use which.
For example, which one is best suited for data with fairly even distributions? And how to deal with distributions that have extreme outliers? Practical tips for finding the balance between drawing attention to the facts you want to draw attention to and showing the data in a way that represents its actual distribution. (cm)
2. Meet “Understanding Privacy”, A New Smashing Book
Data privacy often seems like a scary topic. And, well, in fact, over time, it has become challenging to master the balance between collecting data to enhance the experience for users and staying transparent, ethical, and fair. But how to make sure that your approach to data doesn’t cause any harm? In our upcoming book Understanding Privacy, Heather Burns brings clarity to the subject.
Understanding Privacy is by no means a legal reference manual but a deep dive into the concepts and ideas that inform privacy on the open web. Heather teaches you the principles behind the collection, storage, and use of personal data and how you can adopt them to create a healthy, user-centric approach to privacy in everything you do. By the end of the book, you will have shifted your understanding from a negative view of privacy as a scary legal compliance obligation to a positive view of privacy as an opportunity to build a better web. Jump to the details and pre-order the book now.
3. The Power Of Words
Words are powerful. And with that power comes great responsibility. Language, Please is a great initiative to help copy editors, writers, storytellers, journalists, and everyone else stay on top of current language debates and make thoughtful wording decisions when covering social, cultural, and identity-related topics.
At the heart of Language, Please is a searchable list with hundreds of terms spanning six categories with detailed definitions, related terms, and additional resources: borders and populations; class and social standing; disabilities, neurodiversity, and chronic illness; gender and sexuality; mental health, trauma, and substance use; and race and ethnicity.
The site also features a directory of independent inclusivity readers who can be hired to assist with your project and a set of reference tools and interactive exercises to spark conversations and thoughtful decision-making around story-framing and language usage.
Looking for more writing advice? The Writer’s Room blog offers helpful tips for content designers and writers, as well as an interesting look at the current state of AI-generated content. (cm)
4. Guide To Color And Contrast
Do you know how the human eye works? How people with dichromacy see the world around them? Or have you ever heard of the Bezold effect or what lateral inhibition is all about? If not, no worries. Nate Baldwin’s guide Color & Contrast will take you on an interesting journey through the world of color, how we perceive it, and how the before-mentioned effects (and many more!) affect how users experience the interfaces you built.
In his guide, Nate breaks down scientific, theoretical, and practical information into small, comprehensive bits with actionable insight. From the physiology of the eye, color vision, sensory adaptations, and visual impairments, all the way to color appearance phenomena, color models, color scales for UI and data visualization, and much more, the guide equips you with the knowledge you need to make educated decisions about color and contrast. Each topic cross-references related topics for deeper learning if you want to learn more. An in-depth, yet easy-to-digest, guide. (cm)
5. Accessibility For Teams
Accessibility goes far beyond the code, so when it comes to delivering accessible websites, each person in a team has their specific responsibilities. If you feel that your team hasn’t found the right strategy to tackle accessibility yet, Peter van Grieken’s guide “Accessibility for teams” has got your back.
The guide consists of six parts, with each one of them aimed at the different specialists in your team: product managers, content designers, UX and UI designers, and front-end developers, plus a guide on accessibility testing. A great resource that helps incorporate accessibility into your team’s workflow from the ground up. (cm)
6. Upcoming Online Workshops
That’s right! We run online workshops on frontend and design, be it accessibility, performance, navigation, or landing pages. In fact, we have a couple of workshops coming up soon, and we thought that, you know, you might want to join in as well.
As always, here’s an overview of our upcoming workshops:
- Smart Interface Design Patterns UX
9h-video course on interface design with Vitaly Friedman - Interface Design Patterns UX Training UX
with Vitaly Friedman. Sep 9 – Oct 7 - Designing Better UX With Top Tasks Workflow
with Gerry McGovern. Sept 13–27 - Designing Better Products Masterclass UX
with Stéphanie Walter. Sept 21 – Oct 5 - Architecting Design Systems Workflow
with Nathan Curtis. Oct 6–14 - Optimistic UI Masterclass Dev
with Zell Liew. Oct 6–14 - Designing for Emotion Masterclass UX
with Aarron Walter. Oct 17–18 - Designing The Perfect Web Forms UX
with Vitaly Friedman. Nov 17–18
7. Feedback In UX
Giving and receiving feedback is a crucial part in the field of UX. It helps get to a good outcome and improves trust in a team. However, it can also be hard — and scary. What if my colleague gets offended by my feedback? What if my colleagues don’t like my work? What am I supposed to say if I don’t agree with the feedback? Concerns like these are legitimate. And while each person and situation is unique, there are some things we can keep in mind to get the most out of feedback — whether we give or receive it.
Meltem Barcelona wrote a helpful checklist to help us navigate the muddy waters of feedback in UX. She shares valuable tips for how we can try to understand the other person better and how to adjust our communication style to them, how to give space to make the engagement more successful, and, finally, what we can do if we notice that feedback as a method doesn’t work particularly well. A must-read — not only for UX professionals. (cm)
8. Free UX Handbooks
What practices power the world’s best design teams? DesignBetter by InVision published 10 free eBooks that share valuable insights into how successful teams work — and how you can apply that knowledge to your workflow, too.
The books help you bring design and development closer together, share tips to get the best out of a design sprint, guide you through planning and implementing a design system, look into strategies to communicate with business partners, and much more. All of them are available in ePUB, PDF, and audiobook formats. Happy reading! (cm)
9. UI And UX Checklists
Good checklists are worth gold. Even in complex design projects, they help you keep track of the things that matter while keeping your head free for creativity and problem-solving. When George Hatzis went from project to project a few years ago, he noticed that he was constantly missing fundamental parts of the experience, so he started to write down the critical pieces of a screen he knew would come up again. As he went along, he could tick each item off without needing to go back to fix the things he missed in the first phase of work.
As time went by, George’s collection of checklists grew, and, well, he decided to share them with the community so fellow designers and developers could benefit from them, too. That’s when Checklist Design was born. The site features George’s checklists with UI and UX best practices for all the typical elements you have on standard SaaS pages. You can check and uncheck the items right in your browser, and George even included resources for inspiration, further reading, and examples to dig deeper into each topic. One for the bookmarks. (cm)
10. Podcasts For UI And UX Designers
Podcasts are perfect for gaining fresh insights and giving your knowledge a little boost. But which podcasts are worth tuning into? To help you stay up to date on what’s happening in the world of UX, Camren Browne compiled a list of eleven outstanding podcasts for UX and UI designers.
Whether it’s interview podcasts with industry experts from large organizations, inspiring stories from Black designers and developers from all over the world, the latest graphic design news, or tips for launching your own business ventures, the podcasts in the collection are all bound to broaden your horizons and fine-tune your practices. And if that’s not enough choice for you yet, we are regularly publishing a new episode of our very own Smashing Podcast with interviews with guests from the web community. Just sayin’. ;-) (cm)
That’s All, Folks!
Thank you so much for reading and for your support in helping us keep the web dev and design community strong with our newsletter. See you next time!
This newsletter issue was written and edited by Cosima Mielke (cm), Vitaly Friedman (vf) and Iris Lješnjanin (il).
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Previous Issues
- UX Writing
- New Front-End Techniques
- Useful Front-End Techniques
- Design & UX Gems
- New Front-End Adventures In 2025
- Inclusive Design and Neurodiversity
- UX Kits, Tools & Methods
- How To Measure UX
- New In Front-End
- Web Accessibility
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