New Everpixel Logo
I am going back to freelancing under Everpixel (my “professional” identity) in early 2010. So I gave the logo a bit of a spruce up and I am pondering on using a different color. Mockups and original logo at the bottom.

I am going back to freelancing under Everpixel (my “professional” identity) in early 2010. So I gave the logo a bit of a spruce up and I am pondering on using a different color. Mockups and original logo at the bottom.

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Recently Shopify launched its new forums. I played a pretty big role in designing the site and was anxious to see the response from the community.
Old:

New:

The initial response was great, everyone in the office thought the design was good and the community liked the refresh. After a week the “real” feedback started to come in, most of it being small bugs I missed. However some of the forum regulars began to discuss their distaste for the new wysiwyg editor (before we just had a manual text editor).
This made me realize that I don’t have a methodology in place to interpret feedback. After researching how other designers deal with feedback I came across a good presentation by ex-Digg UI designer Daniel Burka on how Digg interprets feedback.
To sum it up his talk: Daniel gives his 5 types of feedback (positive, bugs, negative, expert, implicit). He then discusses how he reacts to feedback:
After watching his talk and reading more about it. I came to these conclusions regarding the new forums
Overall I think the forums were a success, but there is a lot of headroom for improving my work flow especially in regards to anticipating and interpreting user feedback. If you want to read some more on interpreting feedback look up Mark Boulton, he gave an excellent account on how his design by committee approach is working with Drupal.
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