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Quote by Manish Akshay Rajput

“App or an application is a trend now that most businesses are following in order to grow digitally on a global basis. Growing through an application makes it easier for businesses as well as customers. A mobile application is easier and more user friendly and hence is considered as one of the most proficient ways of expanding online. But how to create an application is a question that most of you might be confused about. Name- Allied Technologies Add- 205 Powell Pl, Brentwood, TN 37027, United States Contact no.- 800- 936-0755 Email- [email protected]

Quote by Manish Akshay Rajput

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Manish Akshay Rajput

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“Website designing is as important as any other criteria that we look for while developing a website. Moreover, website design is the countenance of your company or brand and hence the outlook matters the most. As we judge other people by their outlook at the first glance, the visitors of any brand will judge the website by its outlook, UI/UX and convenience. Name- Allied Technologies”

“User experience is how users feel and think when they interact with, use, and remember the solutions that meet their needs. These solutions can be hardware- or software-based. User experience depends on both the physical senses (touch, hearing, smell, taste, and vision) and the mental states (energy, efficiency, interference, completion, and emotion) of the users.”

“There are two types of brain modes: low and high consumption. Low consumption modes are easy to remember and use less brain resources. Examples are muscle memory and conditioned reflexes. High consumption modes are hard to remember and use more brain resources. Examples are information processing, analysis, and judgment. These are two concepts that are clear in theory but vague in practice. The basic and underlying logic operations should follow the low consumption mode principle. That is why we should avoid double-side-interaction (in a normal mobile phone size).”

“Compartmentalization is a concept that means dividing or perceiving things as different and distinct. It affects how people react to things. For mobile phones, we can use different senses to classify compartmentalization. For example, visual, auditory, tactile, psychological, single, and integrated. For instance, the lock screen interface and the home screen in unlocked mode are different visual compartments. The home screen, the negative screen, and the App library are also different visual compartments on the same level. The top swipe, bottom swipe, left swipe, and right swipe on the home screen are different operation compartments on the same level. Single-finger clicks, single-finger swipes, and single-finger long press are different interaction compartments on the same level. There is a rule for compartmentalization: 1) The fewer items it can extend to the lower layer within the same compartment, the more precise and efficient it is. 2) To keep the low brain consumption mode, the upper and lower layer operations should not be more than three.”

“Apple has a consistent and exquisite concept of using the God curve in everything. The God curve is the curvature of the rounded corners that you can see in many places. For example, in the iPhone, you can see the God curve in the metal frame, the physical buttons, the rear bump, the camera, the receiver, the display, the Lighting connector, and even some internal components. In the software, you can see the God curve in the app icon, the dock, the search bar, the settings bar, the control center, the notification bar in notification center, the widget, and the notch (or dynamic island). The God curve is also present in other products, such as the Macbook and its software. And even in Apple's buildings and facilities, such as the Apple Park visitor center and its trash cans and seats. The God curve is a legacy of Mr. Jobs, who made sure that everything Apple does has a high level of consistency and elegance across hardware, software, product, and enterprise.”