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adam qureshi

Entrepreneur, Founder of a Digital Experience Agency "You can only know your digital experience!"Follow adamqureshi on Twitter

  • Video

    14th May 2011

    LIKEONOMICS

  • Note

    1st May 2011

    CLOUD COMPUTING IS ABOUT SERVICE

     

    Cloud computing is about services, but more specifically it is about self service. What people want more than anything from self service is speed and simplicity.

    Do you remember the days when you walked into a shop and bought software by the box? How did you judge the software? Well, for starters the box needed to be nice and shiny. It needed to look good. And the box needed to be reasonably big, certainly bigger than the size of the CD-ROM that held the software. And it needed to be fairly heavy so that when you lifted it off the shelf you got the feeling that you were buying something weighty.

    You didn’t buy software like that? Well, millions of other people did. And software vendors knew it was important to have shiny, big, fairly heavy boxes if they wanted to sell lots of software. But let’s say those kinds of things didn’t impress you. What did?

    The features. The complexity. All the things you didn’t really need to do with the software but could if you really wanted at some distant point in the future. It was a nice feeling to be paying good money for such feature riches. The usability and simplicity of the software was not very high on the agenda.

    With cloud computing and web-based services everything changes. The world of software design is turned upside down. The way the customer buys is radically transformed. The shift to service is a cultural shift. It is a shift to simplicity; to what I actually need right now rather than what I might need in the distant future. The service industry looks on things very differently from the product/software industry. This is a genuine revolution.

    “Complexity kills,” writes Ray Ozzie, who replaced Bill Gates as Microsoft’s chief software architect in 2006 and is now leaving Microsoft. “Complexity sucks the life out of users, developers and IT. Complexity makes products difficult to plan, build, test and use. Complexity introduces security challenges. Complexity causes administrator frustration.”

    In a self service world I have a task I need to complete right now, this moment. Can you help me complete this task quickly and easily and at a good price? Okay. Good. No, don’t sell me the other stuff. Not at least until I’ve actually completed this task quickly and easily. If I have a good experience I may take more from you. I’m just investing a little of my money and time right now. If you don’t deliver on your promise, I’m gone.

    Product customers are much more locked in. They’ve invested in that big box. Self service customers are much freer. They often want a free trial of the service before they’ll even consider buying it.

    Ray Ozzie believes that Microsoft rising to the huge opportunities of the self service world “will require innovation in user experience, interaction model, authentication model, user data and privacy model, policy and management model, programming and application model, and so on.”

    Isn’t it interesting that he puts user experience first on the list and programming last? This is the time for those focused on the customer, those who enjoy serving; whose goal it is to make other people’s lives simpler and easier.

    original article link below

    www.gerrymcgovern.com

  • Photo
    QR CODES!

    29th April 2011

    QR CODES!

  • Note

    9th April 2011

    coming soon page for a project

    I just got a project last and they wanted a coming soon page . A friend sent me a link for a new product that just does that , launch “viral” coming soon pages! cant wait to give it whirl. Check it out here is the link , I’m one of the first in line to build a viral “Launching Soon” page with #LaunchRock. Join me #launch http://t.co/H1hWPco via @getlaunchrock

  • Photo
    iphone 5 !

    25th March 2011

    iphone 5 !

  • Link

    24th March 2011

    52 Weeks of UX: Why "Clean" Isn't Such a Dirty Word For Designers

    52weeksofux:

    You have probably heard someone say, “That design is so clean!”

    Or perhaps you’ve scanned your RSS feed and seen titles like “1000 Clean and Minimalist Designs”, “Super-clean, Simple, Minimal Website Designs”, or “How to Design Clean, Typographic, Minimalist Sites.”

    I normally throw up in my…

  • Video
    Learn More about

    23rd March 2011

    mobile is here 

  • Link

    23rd March 2011

    MOBILE IS HERE

  • Video

    20th March 2011

    Britney Spears - Till The World Ends (by BritneySpearsVEVO)

  • Link

    11th March 2011

    MetaLab: The Rockstar Myth

    metalabdesign:

    We have to accept that we aren’t super-human. Too many designers pride themselves on hand-crafting everything they produce. They write their own code and insist on designing every screen of a project themselves. Designers like this burn themselves out within a matter of years. When your business…

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