Good books on UI/UX design?
Ok so the title should basically describe what I am wondering here.
A little background: I have been a hacker of some sort since the age of 12 when I taught myself C reading a few books (Im now 23). I generally retain information I read pretty well and find myself with an impressive collection of books on a multitude of programming languages, however as someone who is very technical, I often find that I have VERY little creativity.
Ultimately I would like to become better at UI/UX design, So I am looking for suggestions on some good books that could help me with my lack of creativity and give me some insight into how to PROPERLY design a UI for my user base instead of continuing to use un-original ideas or depend on other (often undependable) programmers.
15 comments
[ 6.2 ms ] story [ 63.5 ms ] threadI've personally read "User Interface Design for Programmers" and "Don't Make Me Think", and would recommend both.
I'd suggest starting out with "The Non-Designer's Design Book," which explains the basics of putting elements on a page or screen together in a tasteful way; "The Humane Interface," which explains testing and measuring for efficiency and why dialog boxes are often bad and so on and so forth; and "Designing for Interaction," which is often cited as a good overview of the practice of interaction design, and I just flipped through it and it seems to be, although I haven't read it.
After those three, you could probably throw a dart at this list: http://www.facebook.com/topic.php?uid=114778998560307&to...
http://benfry.com/phd/
"Edward Tufte has written seven books, including Beautiful Evidence, Visual Explanations, Envisioning Information, The Visual Display of Quantitative Information, and Data Analysis for Politics and Policy. He writes, designs, and self-publishes his books on analytical design, which have received more than 40 awards for content and design. He is Professor Emeritus at Yale University, where he taught courses in statistical evidence, information design, and interface design. His current work includes landscape sculpture, printmaking, video and a new book."
Favorite UX books
The Design of Everyday Things
The Humane Interface
Contextual Design