Famous Last Words

words

Almost a year ago Andrew Breitbart, conservative and controversial political pundit and firebrand, sent an angry tweet, went for a walk, and died of a heart attack.

Friend and colleague Jamie Forrest and I were chatting about this shortly thereafter when it occurred to us that in this age of instantaneous social sharing, many people’s last words will take the form of a tweet (or post, status update, etc.).

An idea was born: we would try to capture the last tweets of notable people. We dubbed our experiment The Tweet Hereafter.

For the past several months we’ve been quietly collecting tweets, not sure whether our project was something we really wanted to announce formally or not.

Today, however, a grim tragedy unfolded and, as is often the case now, it involved a final tweet. Oscar Pistorius, heralded Paralympic and Olympic runner, an athlete lauded for his poise, humility and courage, is charged with murdering his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp, who, only yesterday, posted a giddy anticipatory tweet about Valentine’s Day.

This afternoon Jamie and I decided it was time to let more people know about The Tweet Hereafter. If you’re interested, take a look. In many of the tweets there you’ll likely find no deep meaning. In others, however, lie fascinating, inspiring, frightening, and perhaps tragic insights.

Visit The Tweet Hereafter.

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Let me know what you think on Twitter: @mmcwatters

splash

Questioning Autism? App is Available

I’m proud to announce that our iOS app Questioning Autism? is available in the App store!

Questioning Autism? is an iOS app designed to help concerned parents understand the signs and symptoms of autism, and to convey their observations to their pediatrician. The app features 12 simple questions, and the ability to share the observations with notes via email. Parents and caregivers can track a child’s progress over time, and save their observations for multiple children. Also included are helpful resources and the ability to share the app socially.

Questioning Autism? was inspired by our own difficulties explaining our concerns to our pediatrician, and the delays in getting help for our son that ensued. My hope is that this app can help some other parents avoid these problems. The app was built by Netsoft-USA in collaboration with one of our long-standing clients, Active Health Management. Ideally, Questioning Autism will be built for other platforms, and possibly include a Web-based version as well.

So far, feedback on the app has been incredibly positive, with some parents saying they wish an app like this had been available before they got their diagnosis, others suggesting it would be a great tool for friends and family to help them understand what their child is going through. An ABA therapist even mentioned that the app could help raise awareness among clinicians and doctors in other countries who are unfamiliar with the signs of autism.

Available on the App Store

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Let me know what you think on Twitter: @mmcwatters

MealMonkey

MealMonkey in the App Store

MealMonkey Rate

I’m pleased to announce that our iPhone / iPod healthy eating app, MealMonkey, is now available in the iTunes app store. I’m doubly pleased to announce that it passed the review process on the first attempt!

MealMonkey Progress

We designed and developed this app for our client, ActiveHealth Management. The concept behind the app is to make the task of tracking your meals as easy and painless as possible. Most diet apps require you to engage in the tedious task of counting calories or points, something you’ll do for, oh, a week or so. MealMonkey simply asks you  to use your best judgment. You rate your meals on a sliding scale from healthy to unhealthy — move the slider and click a button. Two clicks and you’re done. If you choose, you can add notes for each meal, adjust the time, and specify a meal type.

MealMonkey Eat Healthy

You can also track your progress over time, filter by meal type to see problem areas, set a healthy eating goal, and get simple healthy eating tips with the swipe of a finger.

MealMonkey Help

On the technical side, the app was built with MonoTouch so that it can be ported to other operating systems like Android and Windows without much hassle.

Available on the App Store

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Let me know what you think on Twitter: @mmcwatters

spork

Spork Fears: Designing for Windows 8

spork

A bit to my surprise, I’ve been thoroughly enjoying designing and developing a Windows 8 tablet app. While I love iOS, there is something truly refreshing about the minimalism and griddiness of the Metro UX.

That said, there is this gnawing fear in the pit of my stomach: does this whole OS make sense? Is it trying to do too much? Can I adequately design something that will be used both on a laptop and a tablet, with a finger and a mouse, via touch and keyboard? Thinking about all of these permutations of user experience is a bit unnerving compared to the relative calm one experiences when designing for iOS.

Am I designing for a spork?

That’s why I found this article so unnerving. Sure, I’ve read plenty of anti-Windows 8 articles, but none so eloquently summed up (expressed, really) what I’ve been worried about.

Passages like this really struck a chord:

What does a Surface Tablet, a Windows 8 Tablet and a Windows 8 desktop have in common with a spork, a spife, a knork and a sporf? Everything. They compromise on everything and excel at nothing. They provide far more features but far fewer benefits. They do many things but they don’t do any things better or even as well. They’re not category defining because they’re not far better at doing any key tasks than are the already existing categories.

Sheesh. That doesn’t inspire much confidence.

Still…

The fact is, plenty of people were equally skeptical about the iPad’s prospects prior to its launch. We won’t really know if Windows 8 will fly until it’s actually in the grubby hands of consumers. Until then, I’ll keep working on our app..and ignoring that little voice in the back of my head whispering, “Spooooooork.”

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Let me know what you think on Twitter: @mmcwatters

windows8

A New Project: Designing a Windows 8 (Metro) App

I’m excited to report that I’m currently working on an app for the new Windows 8 OS. As a lifelong Mac user and avid iOS fan, it’s nonetheless exciting to be designing for a totally new platform like Windows 8, with its unique visual language that eschews skeumorphism, and innovative wayfinding schemas.

The timeline is aggressive, the project scope ambitious, and it feels like navigating uncharted territory; in other words, it’s just what I like!

For the sake of confidentiality, I can’t report more than this, but as things progress, I’ll post updates.

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Let me know what you think on Twitter: @mmcwatters

The Tweet Hereafter

Home page work in progress.

Making progress on the designs for my experimental project with Jamie Forrest, The Tweet Hereafter.

My Autism App: A Setback


Unfortuantely, my plans to develop a simple Web- and app-based autism evaluation tool for concerned parents has hit a snag: the American Psychiatric Association denied my request to use their DSM criteria for autism as the basis for the tool. However, hope is not lost: I have some ideas about how I might incorporate other diagnostic criteria into the tool, and in the process make it an even more robust and interesting experience. It’s not back to the drawing board, but onward and upward.

Re-imagining the Autism Spectrum Diagram

The term “autism spectrum” is a bit of a misnomer, as it’s not actually spectrum in a linear sense at all.

In this post on my other blog, I illuminate how I’ve tackled the problem and hopefully created a more accurate, easier to understand diagram explaining where an individual might be on the so-called autism spectrum.

Sudoku Snapshot

User Testing on the Subway

On the subway this morning, I spied a passenger playing a sudoku app on his iPhone. At the risk of disturbing him (and winding up with a broken nose), I said, “Pardon me, but I see you’re playing a sudoku app. Would you mind looking at one I’m developing for the iPad?”

“Sure!” he said. I fired up Think-Sudoku, and handed him my iPad. I showed him that, unlike other sudoku apps, mine had a unique way of entering numbers. I also explained that, unlike most other apps, mine would have an unlimited number of games.

He was excited, and asked when he could buy it. I’ll take that as a good sign. I asked how much he would pay. “I don’t know…two or three dollars?” This confirms the price point I had in my head.

There’s nothing like a little user testing. Even on the subway.

Top Honors

Site Launch: Top Honors

I just completed a pro bono project at Netsoft USA for a local non-profit called Top Honors; they provide free math tutoring to middle school students in NYC. The project was a soup-to-nuts redesign, including strategy, information architecture, copy development, and WordPress implementation.

Top Honors

Project Notes

The goal of the site is not only to raise awareness of the Top Honors mission, but to drive users to donate, volunteer, or get math help. We took an audience-centric approach, splitting users into their unique user types at the outset of the site experience. Whenever possible, we provided telegraphic calls to action, as well as reinforcing messages such as testimonials and statistics to foster confidence. We were fortunate to have excellent photographs of actual Top Honors tutoring sessions to make the experience feel that much more real.

Because this was a pro bono project, we had to be creative on the implementation without sacrificing the quality of the user experience or the ability of Top Honors staff to maintain the site in the future. Therefore, WordPress was chosen as a free, lightweight CMS. This allowed for an integrated blogging platform that should help drive traffic to the site.

In addition, we used Top Honors’ existing Google Calendar rather than implementing a custom-built tool. This allows Top Honors to update one calendar and have it populate their website with the latest information.

We used a highly-rated WordPress theme called Purity, but we made significant edits to the UI to make it match the Top Honors brand. The site features integrated social features for sharing and following, integration of videos, and a live Twitter feed on the blog.

Take a Look

If you’re interested in supporting Top Honors, volunteering, or getting math help for a middle school student, please visit Top Honors today!

I would only like to add that I feel fortunate to work for a firm, Netsoft USA, that demonstrates its commitment to the community by supporting organizations like Top Honors with pro bono assignments like this.

Netsoft Holiday Card

This year’s Netsoft holiday card (a quick design I came up with just in the nick of time).

Netsoft holiday cover 2011

Netsoft holiday inside 2011

Site Launch: Sean Gallagher

I just launched my first truly responsive website for the talented painter (and good friend), Sean Patrick Gallagher. Check it out!

Sean Patrick Gallagher's website

4elements_home_v9c

4 Elements Music Update

I did the original design for this site about a year ago, and we are in the process of making some significant UI, feature, and functionality updates (link to screenshot of the design in progress). It’s a side project with a friend, but it’s an interesting one, nonetheless.

The Blood Road

The Blood Road The Blood Road

Carl Lorentzen, a good friend and colleague, is writing a vampire novel targeted at a teen audience, and he asked me to help design a site where he could share chapters with a select group of reviewers.

The Blood Road site is powered by WordPress, but is customized with modal overlays and other modifications that take it to the next level (fortunately Carl is an ace HTML implementer, so these mods were a snap).

Unfortunately, the site is by invitation only, so the only interior screenshot I can share is full of greek copy.