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Michele Tepper

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Where are you going, where have you been

At the end of a long research project: we've logged something like 20,000 miles in the air so far, and that's before the two trips out west to present our results.   I want to do a full-on Jan Chipchase and post about the pleasures and terrors of doing user research far from home, but for now I'll leave you with this vivid warning sign from the Milan subways.  Never attempt to have sex with the train doors, people, and have a good weekend.

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categories: Culture, Interaction design, Personal, Product design
Friday 08.11.06
Posted by Michele Tepper
 

It’s better without the context, I’m sure

Overheard in passing on 7th Avenue, in Park Slope, en route to buy some Thai penicillin: "It was the biggest Nerd Scruffle I've ever seen." I'm not sure what a Nerd Scruffle is, but I'm pretty sure I've been in at least three of them.

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categories: Personal
Monday 06.19.06
Posted by Michele Tepper
Comments: 2
 

More travel

How you can tell you’re in the Bay Area: the late night NPR call-in radio show is hosting a spirited conversastion about computer usability. Home tonight, just in time for the temperatures to hit 90+.  Global warming, yay!

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categories: Personal, Technology
Saturday 06.17.06
Posted by Michele Tepper
Comments: 2
 

MacBoo

Part of the pleasure of working with industrial designers is watching the way they interact with stuff — people who make physical products think about those products very differently than most, in the same way I obsess over details of interfaces. I’ve learned so much about how the world around me is made, in the most basic ways, from working with them, listening to them, asking them questions. So it was a delight for me to have my MacBook get delivered to the office and watch the industrial design team examine it like doctors doing a physical. I did refuse to let the mechanical engineer open it up, even though I count the day that her boss took apart an iPod nano among the more mind-bending experiences I’ve had at this job. But I wanted to take my new computer home in one piece, and I did. I’ve spent the weekend catching up on errands and sleep, and playing with the cool toys on the new computer. Unexpectedly, I have some UI complaints — the new iPhoto I find harder to use than the older version, and switching states in PhotoBooth is totally unintuitive — but overall it’s a pleasure to use. Best of all, I think the built-in iSight could change the way people interact with their computers: it’s almost impossible not to have fun with it, to want to play with it, and once you get enough of an installed userbase, the opportunities for networked interactions get a whole lot richer. For now, though, I think it makes the relationship with the computer both more intimate and more performative — you want to watch it watching you. And of course it opens up whole new vistas of procrastination…
comicbook.jpg

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categories: Personal, Product design, Technology
Sunday 06.04.06
Posted by Michele Tepper
Comments: 1
 

There’s a Stein quote for every occasion

Hunting down the airplane quote from yesterday in Everybody’s Autobiography, I found another passage I’d marked out of sheer homesickness when I lived in Ann Arbor:
I also lectured in Brooklyn and that was interesting… because I met Marianne Moore and because an attentive young man accidentally closed the door on my thumb and we had to go into a drugstore to have it fixed. It was dirty the drugstore, one of the few things in America that are dirty are the drugstores but the people in them sitting up and eating and drinking coffee and milk that part of the drugstore that was clean that fascinated me. After that I was always going in to buy a detective novel just to watch the people sitting on the stools. It was like a piece of provincial life in a real city. The people sitting on the stools and eating in the drugstore all looked and acted as if they lived in a small country town. You could not imagine them ever being out in the streets of New York nor the drugstore itself being in New York. I never had enough of going into them.

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tags: gertrude stein
categories: Culture, Personal
Tuesday 03.28.06
Posted by Michele Tepper
 
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Michele Tepper • User Experience Design & Strategy • Brooklyn, NY