Spotify's UI/UX, specially UX is questionable thou
This channel must be a content farm. The amount of times a sentence is repeated makes me think ChatGPT wrote it, and then someone from fiverrr edited the video.
As a Swedish designer that read tons of research papers about HCI I would say this is basic concepts and not specific for Swedish designers. What we red at uni for ex (a Swedish university) is mostly from the states. You can't mean that designers in other countries don't design with these concepts in mind? ๐
spotify mopbile is missing most features and the most important features of the desktop version, for no reason.
Bruh, you literally showed rookie level-1 4$ on Fiverr web design and call it "Best in the World"
I kinda miss old web design from around 2004-2012 - it felt clean to.
I don't really see how this is specific to Sweden only. Aren't you just mentioning how standard/"clean" UI is being created, and good practices when doing so. And then finding examples of these practices being used in Sweden, just like any other country. I'm sure many websites created in Sweden aren't "clean", and the developers do not follow these standards. Also doing a quick Google, about the country with the best web design, will give a wide variety of answers because there isn't really one.
12:44 This site is mostly serif fonts. In fact, this is the only site mentioned in this video that doesn't solely use sans-serif fonts.
I will use mobiles for simple things, but not for serious work or shopping. For serious tasks, a laptop or desktop is a must. And I'm not the only one. So ignoring non-mobile traffic would be a mistake.
Spotify's design has been widely criticized. And rightfully so โ it is an inconsistent mess.
I don't know who you are, first time seeing this channel, just some feedback. For content like this I think you need to show actual examples when you're talking about those things, abstract emojis, gifs and images don't mean anything and anyone can interpret it in any way
Aren't these all just basic web design concepts taught anywhere? I don't see how any of this is particularly Swedish.
2:07 not every country. The German government thinks it is enough to pay a company once to build some stuff. But there are also a lot of German regulations and rules a contractor would have to play by. This results in almost every governmental app looking like shit, ignoring modern technologies and having very few companies even voluntarily applying for the job.
I liked the ideology, it resonates with some of my values, and some of the examples are quite good.
IKEA Was design by Work&Co An American Design Company.
Well, none of this is specific to swedish design, itโs just common knowledge best design practices
I have to agree with many of the comments, the video concept is good and could be improved a lot. Spotify UX decisions are actually questionable, the IKEA app is 2x inferior to the desktop web because the huge lack of finding products by their release date, sale or category. Most IKEA items are sorted into collections and as a new buyer its a living hell to navigate your "wow didn't know this cabinet actually existed" place. The Swedbank, Telia and Tele 2 ( As I am from Estonia which these all companies are also based at and most popular), the screens shown all of them were like from 4-8 years ago, all of their websites and apps have improved a ton since then and why wasn't their latest screens just shown? Also as an European the wording of "best in the world" is questionable as each continent has a vastly different understanding of what is best for them. For example Asian culture has a very different way of consuming information and finding what is the "best" in their context. I would definitely start and try to compare different shopping apps around the world to see how much they use different new technologies. I for example am amazed by Chinese markets way to combining a lot of different apps into one seamless experience. Today you need tons of different useless brand apps to get their discounts otherwise you are "losing out". In Estonia the store Maxima for example, when you open it there is a one click button to start your shopping in the store. It recognizes your location where you are and you don't have to do anything else, then when you are in the store you scan the products by their barcode. When you buy alcohol the app directly asks you to confirm your age using our countries Smart ID system. When you get to the checkout its just again one button to pay for your items which you don't even have to put on a scale or anything, have them in your plastic or paper bag and pay from your phone. No other prompts or questions asked. That's what I call ease of use
Lagom seems to be a short hand for just instinctually satisfying enough, yet logical. Too instinctual and it's just chaotic, and too logical and it's too machine like. It is like the brain and body both at play.
this video is amazing, cheers!
@redesignuxui