Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Sunday, September 27, 2009
Free Games Pizza Pronto
Help the pizza pronto chef to create the best pizza delivery ever known! Serve your customers with a big smile and ofcourse on time! Buy upgrades for your restaurant and reach the daily goals!
Help the pizza pronto chef to create the best pizza delivery ever known! Serve your customers with a big smile and ofcourse on time! Buy upgrades for your restaurant and reach the daily goals!
Options:
play this game
download game file
Help the pizza pronto chef to create the best pizza delivery ever known! Serve your customers with a big smile and ofcourse on time! Buy upgrades for your restaurant and reach the daily goals!
Options:
play this game
download game file
Free Games Cheat AyoDance
Ayo dance sekarang banyak di main anak -anak :
- download cheat nya
- download password zipnya
- Extract dari winrar di harddisk anda. misalnya disk C.
- Akan ada dua folder, yaitu : cheat dan HSHIELD
- Pilih yang folder cheat, klik autof9 perfect delay 75 langsung pilih start
- klik injector dan cari bagian HSHIELD trus pilih perfectX65.dll, langsung centangin Lock it!
- Log-in ke ID ayodance anda
- enjoy and have fun !!!
Pasword Here / klik Here
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Anatomy of a web usability test
In developing a new free 3D avatar community on the web, we've learned the hard way about the critical importance of real life usage feedback.
Web usability testing is a well developed field, yet is a practice we've only adopted in a structured way in past months, and it has been a revelation.
There is something reassuring about developing additions or changes that go to directly solving problem areas identified observing real, unbiased usage. Previous guessing about features best for the Frenzoo user (often well intentioned but misguided) has been replaced by practical improvements.
Previously we would rely on surveys, forum polls and usage stats for user feedback, but whilst useful - it can't tell you why a person doesn't know how to get to the closet from the shop, or how to change skin colors, or how to accept a chat conversation.
Now, we run in-office usability testing every 2 weeks, and it drives the majority of our roadmap. It goes something like this...
1. Recruitment
A week in advance, we make some posts in local active discussion forums looking for people who like games/avatars/internet to spend 2 hours helping try a new site. We don't divulge the name of the site, so as not to bias any of them beforehand - the aim is to see how they react and use the site for the first time.
We offer about $US 23 for the 2 hours or work, which gets a good response - especially from University students who have free spot in their study schedule.
2. The right number of people
We aim to get between 4-6 people each session. Less than that and we can't draw some strong conclusions across the whole group. We also need a balance of guys and girls and enough people so they can chat amongst themselves.
We don't exceed 6 mainly for practical reasons - we don't have enough people to individually watch the participants and make notes on what problems they face.
3. The setup
We equip screen broadcasting software on the participant machines and clear the browser cache and settings to default. We then enable the other team members to be able to see the participants screens so usually 1-2 people can observe "remotely", whilst 1 team member is sitting next to the participant to ask questions, take notes up close and help if they are really stuck.
4. The session
The people arrive, we give them a brief introduction and explain that they should use the website and try to do some things on the site. We make these fairly high level to give them flexibility to see how they should achieve it, and also to not "spell out the instructions" and devalue the test.
For example:
- Go to the website and tell us your first impressions
- Create an account
- Go shopping and make your avatar look great
- Chat with someone and make friends
- Create a cool Tshirt
- Enter a contest
We observe them, and typically only ask questions or give help if they appear stuck or confused: "what are you confused or frustrated about at this moment" etc
After the individual participants trying it themselves for 1 hour or so, there is a 30 minute summary discussion at the end to gather qualitative feedback
5. The debrief
After the participants have left, the team records all the usability problems observed in a shared Google spreadsheet (and any bugs found are also logged) then there is a team discussion to consolidate it. Lots of head nodding and everyone really understanding the issues.
5. The next steps
Then the design team will come up with the improvements suggested, be it new enhancements or UI tweaks, and assigns the priorities to them, and these are then scheduled into our release plan.
Then 2 weeks later we go through it all again, and see how the improvements we have implemented are working out in practice, and what are the next set of problems and opportunities to conquer...
Labels:
avatars,
focus group,
frenzoo,
usability test,
web 2.0
Anatomy of a web usability test
In developing a new free 3D avatar community on the web, we've learned the hard way about the critical importance of real life usage feedback.
Web usability testing is a well developed field, yet is a practice we've only adopted in a structured way in past months, and it has been a revelation.
There is something reassuring about developing additions or changes that go to directly solving problem areas identified observing real, unbiased usage. Previous guessing about features best for the Frenzoo user (often well intentioned but misguided) has been replaced by practical improvements.
Previously we would rely on surveys, forum polls and usage stats for user feedback, but whilst useful - it can't tell you why a person doesn't know how to get to the closet from the shop, or how to change skin colors, or how to accept a chat conversation.
Now, we run in-office usability testing every 2 weeks, and it drives the majority of our roadmap. It goes something like this...
1. Recruitment
A week in advance, we make some posts in local active discussion forums looking for people who like games/avatars/internet to spend 2 hours helping try a new site. We don't divulge the name of the site, so as not to bias any of them beforehand - the aim is to see how they react and use the site for the first time.
We offer about $US 23 for the 2 hours or work, which gets a good response - especially from University students who have free spot in their study schedule.
2. The right number of people
We aim to get between 4-6 people each session. Less than that and we can't draw some strong conclusions across the whole group. We also need a balance of guys and girls and enough people so they can chat amongst themselves.
We don't exceed 6 mainly for practical reasons - we don't have enough people to individually watch the participants and make notes on what problems they face.
3. The setup
We equip screen broadcasting software on the participant machines and clear the browser cache and settings to default. We then enable the other team members to be able to see the participants screens so usually 1-2 people can observe "remotely", whilst 1 team member is sitting next to the participant to ask questions, take notes up close and help if they are really stuck.
4. The session
The people arrive, we give them a brief introduction and explain that they should use the website and try to do some things on the site. We make these fairly high level to give them flexibility to see how they should achieve it, and also to not "spell out the instructions" and devalue the test.
For example:
- Go to the website and tell us your first impressions
- Create an account
- Go shopping and make your avatar look great
- Chat with someone and make friends
- Create a cool Tshirt
- Enter a contest
We observe them, and typically only ask questions or give help if they appear stuck or confused: "what are you confused or frustrated about at this moment" etc
After the individual participants trying it themselves for 1 hour or so, there is a 30 minute summary discussion at the end to gather qualitative feedback
5. The debrief
After the participants have left, the team records all the usability problems observed in a shared Google spreadsheet (and any bugs found are also logged) then there is a team discussion to consolidate it. Lots of head nodding and everyone really understanding the issues.
5. The next steps
Then the design team will come up with the improvements suggested, be it new enhancements or UI tweaks, and assigns the priorities to them, and these are then scheduled into our release plan.
Then 2 weeks later we go through it all again, and see how the improvements we have implemented are working out in practice, and what are the next set of problems and opportunities to conquer...
Labels:
avatars,
focus group,
frenzoo,
usability test,
web 2.0
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Urban Terror 4.1
Urban Terror 4.1 Download. Urban Terror is a mod turned standalone that´s on the Quake 3 engine. It features realistic gameplay, much like in Counter Strike, except for a twist: you can jump off of walls and do other crazy things like that. Also, all the weapons are available at spawn, instead of a buy system. The same applies to the equipment. Another interesting idea is instead of realistic looking skins, there are orange and blue teams.
Terror is a mod turned standalone that´s on the Quake 3 engine. It features realistic gameplay, much like in Counter Strike, except for a twist: you can jump off of walls and do other crazy things like that. Also, all the weapons are available at spawn, instead of a buy system. The same applies to the equipment. Another interesting idea is instead of realistic looking skins, there are orange and blue teams.
Download Here
Terror is a mod turned standalone that´s on the Quake 3 engine. It features realistic gameplay, much like in Counter Strike, except for a twist: you can jump off of walls and do other crazy things like that. Also, all the weapons are available at spawn, instead of a buy system. The same applies to the equipment. Another interesting idea is instead of realistic looking skins, there are orange and blue teams.
Download Here
Pc CD-Rom Games
Review : The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind, commonly referred to as Morrowind,
is a single player action computer game developed by Bethesda Game Studios, and published by Bethesda Softworks and Ubisoft. It is the third installment in The Elder Scrolls series of games. It was released in North America in 2002 for Microsoft Windows and the Xbox. Well-received publicly and critically, selling over four million copies winning more than 60 awards, including Game of the Year, Morrowind holds an average review score of 89% from both Metacritic and Game Rankings. game spawned two expansion packs for the PC: Tribunal and Bloodmoon. Both were eventually repackaged into a full set containing all three, Morrowind: Game of the Year Edition, which shipped on October 30, 2003 for both PC and Xbox.
Download : [ 1 ] — [ 2 ]
Password : www.maxgrab.org
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