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Holtzblatt, Karen
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RE '15-KEYNOTES: "Can You Intentionally Design ..."
Can You Intentionally Design a Product That Is Cool? (Keynote)
Karen Holtzblatt
(InContext, USA)
What makes products cool? Can teams deliberately design for cool? What mysterious forces need to align in order to create the profoundly innovative products? To find out, we immersed ourselves in the experiences of everyday people as they used their coolest products. And we discovered there's really nothing magical about it. It's about joy and the underlying seven Cool Concepts -- the core human motivations at the very heart of joy. The Cool Concepts create a framework for guiding design and analyzing products. The Cool Concepts also require us to change our current methods for user research and design for the next generation of users and platforms. In this talk, Karen Holtzblatt articulates these key dimensions that product teams need to consider to create the cool user experience. She shares the findings of The Cool Project and introduces the audience to the Cool Concepts, organized into The Wheel of Joy in Life and The Triangle of Design.
@InProceedings{RE15p2,
author = {Karen Holtzblatt},
title = {Can You Intentionally Design a Product That Is Cool? (Keynote)},
booktitle = {Proc.\ RE},
publisher = {IEEE},
pages = {2--3},
doi = {},
year = {2015},
}
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Jackson, Michael
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RE '15-KEYNOTES: "Requirements, Behaviours, ..."
Requirements, Behaviours, and Software Engineering (Keynote)
Michael Jackson
(Open University, UK)
The proper treatment and expression of system requirements has been a
topic of interest for more than twenty years. This talk proposes that they
should be understood as desired properties and effects of the behaviour of
the system. A discipline to support that understanding is presented, and a
brief account of the principles that underpin it.
@InProceedings{RE15p4,
author = {Michael Jackson},
title = {Requirements, Behaviours, and Software Engineering (Keynote)},
booktitle = {Proc.\ RE},
publisher = {IEEE},
pages = {4--5},
doi = {},
year = {2015},
}
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Mirzaee, Aydin Y.
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RE '15-KEYNOTES: "You versus Users – Who Owns ..."
You versus Users – Who Owns Your Roadmap? (Keynote)
Aydin Y. Mirzaee
(FluidReview, Canada; SurveyMonkey, Canada)
Requirement Engineering can become complex when the number of users who submit requirements is large. In the world of online Software as a Service businesses, the number of users can be massive -- often in the millions. In the case of SurveyMonkey, the world's largest survey company, it can be in the tens of millions. In a world with increasing demands and where users have a louder voice than ever via Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn, how does one prioritize feature requests, bug fixes and everything else requested by customers and partners? Is the roadmap in the hands of the company or the users? Is this a winnable battle? In this talk, I will tell the story of how product requirements were determined when Fluidware was first established almost eight years ago and how it evolved in the various accelerated growth stages of the company before and after acquisition by SurveyMonkey.
@InProceedings{RE15p1,
author = {Aydin Y. Mirzaee},
title = {You versus Users – Who Owns Your Roadmap? (Keynote)},
booktitle = {Proc.\ RE},
publisher = {IEEE},
pages = {1--1},
doi = {},
year = {2015},
}
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