Designing Software for the Mobile Context [electronic resource] : A Practitioner’s Guide /

Roman Longoria The goal of this book is to provide a useful and timely guide to the practitioner who designs or develops mobile applications. The contributors to this book are leaders in the user interface (UI) community actively working in mobile platform technol­ ogy and mobile application design. Thus, this book offers the reader unique insight into the latest technologies, market trends, design ideas, and usability data. We provide the reader with the latest information that will have direct and immediate impact on a broad scope of product design decisions, including those for voice, phone, and personal digital assistant (PDA) applications. In other words, this book is written by practitioners, for practitioners. When I approached my coauthors about writing a chapter, I had only a few criteria. First, each author should have unique experience and expertise about a certain aspect of mobile applications. Second, that the authors be able to provide an introduction to the technologies with which they work. Third, that each chapter include case studies and lessons learned from empirical usability evaluations. And fourth, that each author include in the chapter some fundamental knowledge that they wish they had known when they got started designing for the mobile context.

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Main Authors: Longoria, Roman. editor., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: London : Springer London : Imprint: Springer, 2004
Subjects:Computer science., Computer communication systems., User interfaces (Computer systems)., Computer Science., Computer Communication Networks., User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-85729-374-9
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record_format koha
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
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databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Computer science.
Computer communication systems.
User interfaces (Computer systems).
Computer Science.
Computer Communication Networks.
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
Computer science.
Computer communication systems.
User interfaces (Computer systems).
Computer Science.
Computer Communication Networks.
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
spellingShingle Computer science.
Computer communication systems.
User interfaces (Computer systems).
Computer Science.
Computer Communication Networks.
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
Computer science.
Computer communication systems.
User interfaces (Computer systems).
Computer Science.
Computer Communication Networks.
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
Longoria, Roman. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Designing Software for the Mobile Context [electronic resource] : A Practitioner’s Guide /
description Roman Longoria The goal of this book is to provide a useful and timely guide to the practitioner who designs or develops mobile applications. The contributors to this book are leaders in the user interface (UI) community actively working in mobile platform technol­ ogy and mobile application design. Thus, this book offers the reader unique insight into the latest technologies, market trends, design ideas, and usability data. We provide the reader with the latest information that will have direct and immediate impact on a broad scope of product design decisions, including those for voice, phone, and personal digital assistant (PDA) applications. In other words, this book is written by practitioners, for practitioners. When I approached my coauthors about writing a chapter, I had only a few criteria. First, each author should have unique experience and expertise about a certain aspect of mobile applications. Second, that the authors be able to provide an introduction to the technologies with which they work. Third, that each chapter include case studies and lessons learned from empirical usability evaluations. And fourth, that each author include in the chapter some fundamental knowledge that they wish they had known when they got started designing for the mobile context.
format Texto
topic_facet Computer science.
Computer communication systems.
User interfaces (Computer systems).
Computer Science.
Computer Communication Networks.
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
author Longoria, Roman. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Longoria, Roman. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Longoria, Roman. editor.
title Designing Software for the Mobile Context [electronic resource] : A Practitioner’s Guide /
title_short Designing Software for the Mobile Context [electronic resource] : A Practitioner’s Guide /
title_full Designing Software for the Mobile Context [electronic resource] : A Practitioner’s Guide /
title_fullStr Designing Software for the Mobile Context [electronic resource] : A Practitioner’s Guide /
title_full_unstemmed Designing Software for the Mobile Context [electronic resource] : A Practitioner’s Guide /
title_sort designing software for the mobile context [electronic resource] : a practitioner’s guide /
publisher London : Springer London : Imprint: Springer,
publishDate 2004
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-85729-374-9
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:2122902018-07-30T23:45:32ZDesigning Software for the Mobile Context [electronic resource] : A Practitioner’s Guide / Longoria, Roman. editor. SpringerLink (Online service) textLondon : Springer London : Imprint: Springer,2004.engRoman Longoria The goal of this book is to provide a useful and timely guide to the practitioner who designs or develops mobile applications. The contributors to this book are leaders in the user interface (UI) community actively working in mobile platform technol­ ogy and mobile application design. Thus, this book offers the reader unique insight into the latest technologies, market trends, design ideas, and usability data. We provide the reader with the latest information that will have direct and immediate impact on a broad scope of product design decisions, including those for voice, phone, and personal digital assistant (PDA) applications. In other words, this book is written by practitioners, for practitioners. When I approached my coauthors about writing a chapter, I had only a few criteria. First, each author should have unique experience and expertise about a certain aspect of mobile applications. Second, that the authors be able to provide an introduction to the technologies with which they work. Third, that each chapter include case studies and lessons learned from empirical usability evaluations. And fourth, that each author include in the chapter some fundamental knowledge that they wish they had known when they got started designing for the mobile context.1 Designing Applications for 3G Mobile Devices -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Designer’s Role -- 1.3 Understanding the Industry -- 1.4 Understanding the User -- 1.5 Understanding the Technology -- 1.6 Understanding Devices -- 1.7 User Interface Elements -- 1.8 When and What to Use (Markup, Native OS, or Messaging) -- 1.9 Tips -- 1.10 Outtakes from Usability Testing -- 1.11 References -- 2 Designing Voice Applications -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Requirements Definition -- 2.3 High-Level Design -- 2.4 Detailed Design -- 2.5 Production -- 2.6 Tuning and Validation -- 2.7 Case Studies -- 2.8 Guidelines -- 2.9 References -- 3 Designing J2ME™ Applications: MIDP and UI Design -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 J2ME Platform Architecture -- 3.3 MIDP Overview -- 3.4 MIDP Application Overview -- 3.5 Creating a MIDP Application -- 3.6 Using Abstract Commands -- 3.7 Using MIDP User Interface Components -- 3.8 Handling Deployment and Usage Issues -- 3.9 Conclusion -- 4 Designing Multimodal Applications -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Motivation: Multimodal Interaction Use Cases -- 4.3 Discussion of Interaction Modes -- 4.4 Contextual Information as an Input Modality -- 4.5 Degrees of Multimodality -- 4.6 Multimoda1 Synchronization: What Makes Multimodality Work? -- 4.7 Solutions for Voice and Graphical Interfaces -- 4.8 Design of Multimoda1 Applications for Mobile Devices -- 4.9 Internationalization and Localization -- 4.10 Usability -- 4.11 Design Artifacts -- 4.12 Testing Mu1timodal Applications -- 4.13 Tutorial Example: Designing and Implementing a Multimodal Color Chooser -- 4.14 Summary -- 4.15 References -- 5 Heuristics for Designing Mobile Applications -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Summary of the Heuristics -- 5.3 Heuristics in Detail -- 5.4 Conclusions -- 6 A Development Process for Advanced User Interfaces of Wireless Mobile Devices -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Project Details -- 6.3 Solution Details -- 6.4 Post-Project Results -- 6.5 Acknowledgements -- 6.6 References.Roman Longoria The goal of this book is to provide a useful and timely guide to the practitioner who designs or develops mobile applications. The contributors to this book are leaders in the user interface (UI) community actively working in mobile platform technol­ ogy and mobile application design. Thus, this book offers the reader unique insight into the latest technologies, market trends, design ideas, and usability data. We provide the reader with the latest information that will have direct and immediate impact on a broad scope of product design decisions, including those for voice, phone, and personal digital assistant (PDA) applications. In other words, this book is written by practitioners, for practitioners. When I approached my coauthors about writing a chapter, I had only a few criteria. First, each author should have unique experience and expertise about a certain aspect of mobile applications. Second, that the authors be able to provide an introduction to the technologies with which they work. Third, that each chapter include case studies and lessons learned from empirical usability evaluations. And fourth, that each author include in the chapter some fundamental knowledge that they wish they had known when they got started designing for the mobile context.Computer science.Computer communication systems.User interfaces (Computer systems).Computer Science.Computer Communication Networks.User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-85729-374-9URN:ISBN:9780857293749