Ask HN: Who are the best designers in Silicon Valley?
7 points| pkpp1233 | 11 years ago
Hope to model my work off theirs. And potentially bother them for feedback one day since they're close to home.
7 points| pkpp1233 | 11 years ago
Hope to model my work off theirs. And potentially bother them for feedback one day since they're close to home.
vitovito|11 years ago
And the audience shouted out names.
Then he asked, name the works of design they are considered great for.
And the audience was silent.
...
Don't look for names. Look for works, and then find out who made them.
If you don't know what's considered good work, don't ask like you asked this question. "Good" is subjective, and design is not art; design has a purpose, is backed by research, has metrics, supports a business model. Rather, you want to study work that solves the problem the designer intended. Maybe they intended to make it easy to book an airline ticket, or maybe they intended to appease ten different executive vice presidents. Pick any work, and learn why it was made that way, and determine if it's great or not (or, more likely, if there are aspects which are great for a particular use case). You could do in-depth interviews, you could do contextual inquiry, you could ask the designer, you could usability test it, you could go through heuristics, you could do GOMS, there are any number of methods.
But don't look for names first.
divisive|11 years ago
I'm not sure how true that is. There are principles of design, across fields, within fields, and in specific use cases, and you can judge based on the principles how good a design is. "Good" may be hard to define in general and in each context, but it's not as subjective as people think it is.
hackerews|11 years ago
CmonDev|11 years ago
dangrossman|11 years ago
bbissoon|11 years ago
Microsoft made it popular but it's been around for a while in response to design driven web designer vs info and interface driven design.
kcovia|11 years ago