January 2010

Why build a new weather app? There are a ton of them out there (until now I’ve been partial to Weatherbug) so if you want to to get noticed, you need to come to market with a fresh perspective and Outside (developed by Robocat) does just that. The first thing you’ll notice is that the UI is meticulously crafted (courtesy of superstar designer Michael Flarup) in a style that remains playful without compromising credibility (after all, you want to trust that this app will properly equip you in your battle against the elements). This is apparent both in the visual design style but also with the impeccable attention to detail paid to the interaction design.

Once you start playing around, you’ll start to get a sense of their refreshing approach to communicating the weather to their users – they do it in a very human way by a) simplifying the amount of features they offer and b) focusing those features on how the weather will affect you.

Here’s a look at the instructions you get when you first fire up the app letting you know how to navigate their information. This style gives you a great sense of the overall feel of the app.

If you’re looking for detailed satellite imagery from the Doppler2000, this is not the app for you but if you want to be alerted when there’s rain on the way when then you might want to give it a spin.

Their human-centric approach manifests itself mostly in the importance they place on user-defined notifications based on certain conditions. What’s so wonderful about this is that this is the kind of stuff that you really care about 90% of the time – weather changes that will affect your behavior. Below you can see the alerts that I’ve set up for Cold (below 30 degrees) and Rain.

They allow you to set alerts based on the following conditions: Cold, Rain, UV and T-Shirt (and clearly working on others). For each one, you set the threshold at which you want to be alerted and then customize the push notification you get when it crosses that threshold. They also let you customize what the push notification will say. Here’s what I have for when we cross my cold weather threshold:

The notification system is also where their business model comes in – the initial $2.99 purchase gets you the app + 1 month of notifications and then after that you can pay $1 for 3 months of notifications. I am certain that paying for a weather app, much less subscribing to one, is going to turn a lot of people off. I’m also curious to see how the somewhat wonky payment structure plays out as it presents an interesting communication challenge.

This app might not be for everyone (i.e. hard core weather fetishists, people who expect weather info to be free) but if you want an app that delivers daily weather information via a wonderfully designed experience and interaction and offers a thoughtfully-executed notification system, I highly recommend Outside.

In addition to that, I think it’s important to recognize how they’ve approached an oversaturated market from a new angle. Are there other apps we take for granted that could be given a similar treatment?

- check out a thorough walkthough of the app on their site.
- download the app. (iTunes link)
- follow the dev team on Twitter.

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It looks like Motorola is the first to put “back-of-device interaction” into production. That’s an idea that HCI researchers including Patrick Baudisch have demonstrated in the past few years (see his nano touch page for details). Putting a touchpad on the back of a device gets your fingers out of the way of the screen and gives potential for more precise interaction as well as new types of gestures.

Motorola-backflip-08-r3media-150x100 Motorola-backflip-10-r3media-150x100

via Touch Usability

More at Slashgear and Engadget. (Images from Slashgear.)

I’m happy to finally see someone put this into production. I don’t love the industrial design on this particular device but as a feature I think it would make for a really pleasant browsing experience once you get used to it.

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I think I have to have one of these not just because it looks like it came from another planet but because it creatively solves some genuine problems in the kitchen.

Check out more about the Foodpod here.

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The Philosophy major in me loves this little box. Also, this makes me miss ITP a whole lot.

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The next time you need a third hand to hold your coffee cup while you dig around in your bag for something, just stick it to a streetlight with this ingenious hack.

I really love how simple and elegant this hack is though I wonder how deep the need really is. Either way, very nicely executed.

Check out more projects like this here.

Thanks to @chadsnuts for the tip.

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