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IA / UX Designer |
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| wireframes | site maps | ![]() |
process flows | ![]() |
ui design | ![]() |
documents | ![]() |
misc | ||||||||
| · | dashboard |
· | big company | · | clearance | · | Google redesign | · | func specs | · | configurator | ||||||
| · | mobile |
· | finance demo | · | flash minisite | · | compare nav. | · | user task map | · | feature spectrum | ||||||
| · | magazine 1 |
· | numbered pages | · | decision matrix | · | insurance form | · | use case | · | best practices | ||||||
| · | simple |
· | dynamic content | · | create account | · | admin page | · | visualization | · | online game | ||||||
| · | intranet | · | products | · | plugin | · | fields defined | ||||||||||
| · | templates | ||||||||||||||||
This is a comparison of two search interfaces designed to enable a user to use "neighborhood" as a criterion. Example "A" is part of of a City of NY Restaurant Inpection Information website. Example "B" I created for the City of NY online Training Provider Directory. In both cases there are multiple search criteria available, of which "neighborhood" is only one. Let's take a look: |
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