hi Probability of death by NCDs high in India: WHO By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Tue, 20 Jan 2015 16:17:56 +0530 Full Article Health
hi Swine flu hits Telangana hard By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Tue, 20 Jan 2015 16:35:29 +0530 Seven deaths and 150 positive cases have been reported since January 1 Full Article Hyderabad
hi Why this surge in H1N1 cases, States asked By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Mon, 16 Feb 2015 00:27:11 +0530 Centre wants epidemiological study to identify the causes Full Article Health
hi 40 new drug stores granted licence to sell Tamiflu tablets in Delhi By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Thu, 19 Feb 2015 18:59:34 +0530 Full Article Delhi
hi The enemy within By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sat, 14 Mar 2015 15:11:32 +0530 Why are we still fighting an age-old disease like tuberculosis? Lack of awareness is the main reason. Full Article Magazine
hi HC issues notice to Delhi government on chewable tobacco ban By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Wed, 08 Apr 2015 17:09:14 +0530 Court says no action against sellers till the next date of hearing on May 20, 2015. Full Article Delhi
hi India among nations with largest urban child survival gap By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2015 01:22:45 +0530 India also scores poorly in the Mother’s Index Rank standing at 140 out of 179 countries. Full Article India
hi Fewer children dying in infancy, says National Family Health Survey By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Wed, 20 Jan 2016 04:20:39 +0530 Full Article Policy & Issues
hi Child stunting declines, but still high, data show By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Thu, 21 Jan 2016 02:26:20 +0530 As of 2005-06, India had 62 million stunted children, accounting for a third of the world’s burden of stunting. Full Article India
hi Widespread lack of HIV awareness in Indian adults By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Thu, 21 Jan 2016 05:03:20 +0530 The pattern is, worryingly, seen even in high burden States with the most drastic fall coming from Andhra Pradesh. Full Article India
hi Excess pregnancy weight gain may make your child obese By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sat, 07 May 2016 15:38:27 +0530 Full Article Health
hi Not all are equal: Where health coverage lags behind By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Tue, 09 Aug 2016 02:25:43 +0530 Rural areas are still underserved by healthcare systems despite better funding. Full Article Policy & Issues
hi Delhi dengue, chikungunya deaths: Centre seeks report By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 16 Sep 2016 18:52:35 +0530 Full Article Policy & Issues
hi Weighing in on sugar tax By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sun, 16 Oct 2016 01:10:23 +0530 The World Health Organisation’s recommendation that nations tax sugary drinks is a well-meaning one, but the needs of local communities cannot be left out Full Article Health
hi Centre forms high-level panel to monitor bird flu situation By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Wed, 26 Oct 2016 19:18:51 +0530 Full Article India
hi Biden stresses case for computer chips before crucial Senate vote By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Tue, 26 Jul 2022 10:06:26 +0530 President Joe Biden is asking Congress to send him a bipartisan bill designed to boost the country’s computer chips industry Full Article Technology
hi Current development, optimisation strategies and future perspectives for lead-free dielectric ceramics in high field and high energy density capacitors By pubs.rsc.org Published On :: Chem. Soc. Rev., 2024, 53,10761-10790DOI: 10.1039/D4CS00536H, Review Article Open Access   This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.Hareem Zubairi, Zhilun Lu, Yubo Zhu, Ian M. Reaney, Ge WangThis review highlights the remarkable advancements and future trends in bulk ceramics, MLCCs and ceramic thin films for lead-free high field and high energy density capacitors.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
hi Multidimensionally ordered mesoporous intermetallics: Frontier nanoarchitectonics for advanced catalysis By pubs.rsc.org Published On :: Chem. Soc. Rev., 2024, Advance ArticleDOI: 10.1039/D4CS00484A, Tutorial ReviewHao Lv, Ben LiuThis perspective summarizes recent progress in rational design and synthesis of multidimensionally ordered mesoporous intermetallics, and propose new frontier nanoarchitectonics for designing high-performance functional nanocatalysts.To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
hi Fundamentals of the recycling of spent lithium-ion batteries By pubs.rsc.org Published On :: Chem. Soc. Rev., 2024, Advance ArticleDOI: 10.1039/D4CS00362D, Review ArticlePengwei Li, Shaohua Luo, Yicheng Lin, Jiefeng Xiao, Xiaoning Xia, Xin Liu, Li Wang, Xiangming HeFundamentals of battery recycling play a vital role in addressing the challenges posed by spent lithium-ion batteries by providing the theoretical foundation and technical tools necessary for the efficient recycling of LIBs.To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
hi Spare a thought for this man too By www.thehindubusinessline.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2013 12:59:43 +0530 Full Article B Baskar
hi Ownership of parking space By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Jul 2016 14:05:00 +0530 Your property-related legal queries answered by S.C. RAGHURAM, Partner, RANK Associates, a Chennai-based law firm Full Article Property Plus
hi Common sense architecture By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 29 Jul 2016 21:31:56 +0530 A vast majority of what we build today can actually be done more appropriately and reversibly with natural materials, says SATHYA PRAKASH VARANASHI Full Article Property Plus
hi On Xi Jinping [electronic resource] : how Xi's Marxist nationalism is shaping China and the world / Kevin Rudd. By darius.uleth.ca Published On :: New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2024] Full Article
hi Mobile-First CSS: Is It Time for a Rethink? By Published On :: 2022-06-09T02:13:10+00:00 The mobile-first design methodology is great—it focuses on what really matters to the user, it’s well-practiced, and it’s been a common design pattern for years. So developing your CSS mobile-first should also be great, too…right? Well, not necessarily. Classic mobile-first CSS development is based on the principle of overwriting style declarations: you begin your CSS with default style declarations, and overwrite and/or add new styles as you add breakpoints with min-width media queries for larger viewports (for a good overview see “What is Mobile First CSS and Why Does It Rock?”). But all those exceptions create complexity and inefficiency, which in turn can lead to an increased testing effort and a code base that’s harder to maintain. Admit it—how many of us willingly want that? On your own projects, mobile-first CSS may yet be the best tool for the job, but first you need to evaluate just how appropriate it is in light of the visual design and user interactions you’re working on. To help you get started, here’s how I go about tackling the factors you need to watch for, and I’ll discuss some alternate solutions if mobile-first doesn’t seem to suit your project. Advantages of mobile-first Some of the things to like with mobile-first CSS development—and why it’s been the de facto development methodology for so long—make a lot of sense: Development hierarchy. One thing you undoubtedly get from mobile-first is a nice development hierarchy—you just focus on the mobile view and get developing. Tried and tested. It’s a tried and tested methodology that’s worked for years for a reason: it solves a problem really well. Prioritizes the mobile view. The mobile view is the simplest and arguably the most important, as it encompasses all the key user journeys, and often accounts for a higher proportion of user visits (depending on the project). Prevents desktop-centric development. As development is done using desktop computers, it can be tempting to initially focus on the desktop view. But thinking about mobile from the start prevents us from getting stuck later on; no one wants to spend their time retrofitting a desktop-centric site to work on mobile devices! Disadvantages of mobile-first Setting style declarations and then overwriting them at higher breakpoints can lead to undesirable ramifications: More complexity. The farther up the breakpoint hierarchy you go, the more unnecessary code you inherit from lower breakpoints. Higher CSS specificity. Styles that have been reverted to their browser default value in a class name declaration now have a higher specificity. This can be a headache on large projects when you want to keep the CSS selectors as simple as possible. Requires more regression testing. Changes to the CSS at a lower view (like adding a new style) requires all higher breakpoints to be regression tested. The browser can’t prioritize CSS downloads. At wider breakpoints, classic mobile-first min-width media queries don’t leverage the browser’s capability to download CSS files in priority order. The problem of property value overrides There is nothing inherently wrong with overwriting values; CSS was designed to do just that. Still, inheriting incorrect values is unhelpful and can be burdensome and inefficient. It can also lead to increased style specificity when you have to overwrite styles to reset them back to their defaults, something that may cause issues later on, especially if you are using a combination of bespoke CSS and utility classes. We won’t be able to use a utility class for a style that has been reset with a higher specificity. With this in mind, I’m developing CSS with a focus on the default values much more these days. Since there’s no specific order, and no chains of specific values to keep track of, this frees me to develop breakpoints simultaneously. I concentrate on finding common styles and isolating the specific exceptions in closed media query ranges (that is, any range with a max-width set). This approach opens up some opportunities, as you can look at each breakpoint as a clean slate. If a component’s layout looks like it should be based on Flexbox at all breakpoints, it’s fine and can be coded in the default style sheet. But if it looks like Grid would be much better for large screens and Flexbox for mobile, these can both be done entirely independently when the CSS is put into closed media query ranges. Also, developing simultaneously requires you to have a good understanding of any given component in all breakpoints up front. This can help surface issues in the design earlier in the development process. We don’t want to get stuck down a rabbit hole building a complex component for mobile, and then get the designs for desktop and find they are equally complex and incompatible with the HTML we created for the mobile view! Though this approach isn’t going to suit everyone, I encourage you to give it a try. There are plenty of tools out there to help with concurrent development, such as Responsively App, Blisk, and many others. Having said that, I don’t feel the order itself is particularly relevant. If you are comfortable with focusing on the mobile view, have a good understanding of the requirements for other breakpoints, and prefer to work on one device at a time, then by all means stick with the classic development order. The important thing is to identify common styles and exceptions so you can put them in the relevant stylesheet—a sort of manual tree-shaking process! Personally, I find this a little easier when working on a component across breakpoints, but that’s by no means a requirement. Closed media query ranges in practice In classic mobile-first CSS we overwrite the styles, but we can avoid this by using media query ranges. To illustrate the difference (I’m using SCSS for brevity), let’s assume there are three visual designs: smaller than 768from 768 to below 10241024 and anything larger Take a simple example where a block-level element has a default padding of “20px,” which is overwritten at tablet to be “40px” and set back to “20px” on desktop. Classic min-width mobile-first .my-block { padding: 20px; @media (min-width: 768px) { padding: 40px; } @media (min-width: 1024px) { padding: 20px; } } Closed media query range .my-block { padding: 20px; @media (min-width: 768px) and (max-width: 1023.98px) { padding: 40px; } } The subtle difference is that the mobile-first example sets the default padding to “20px” and then overwrites it at each breakpoint, setting it three times in total. In contrast, the second example sets the default padding to “20px” and only overrides it at the relevant breakpoint where it isn’t the default value (in this instance, tablet is the exception). The goal is to: Only set styles when needed. Not set them with the expectation of overwriting them later on, again and again. To this end, closed media query ranges are our best friend. If we need to make a change to any given view, we make it in the CSS media query range that applies to the specific breakpoint. We’ll be much less likely to introduce unwanted alterations, and our regression testing only needs to focus on the breakpoint we have actually edited. Taking the above example, if we find that .my-block spacing on desktop is already accounted for by the margin at that breakpoint, and since we want to remove the padding altogether, we could do this by setting the mobile padding in a closed media query range. .my-block { @media (max-width: 767.98px) { padding: 20px; } @media (min-width: 768px) and (max-width: 1023.98px) { padding: 40px; } } The browser default padding for our block is “0,” so instead of adding a desktop media query and using unset or “0” for the padding value (which we would need with mobile-first), we can wrap the mobile padding in a closed media query (since it is now also an exception) so it won’t get picked up at wider breakpoints. At the desktop breakpoint, we won’t need to set any padding style, as we want the browser default value. Bundling versus separating the CSS Back in the day, keeping the number of requests to a minimum was very important due to the browser’s limit of concurrent requests (typically around six). As a consequence, the use of image sprites and CSS bundling was the norm, with all the CSS being downloaded in one go, as one stylesheet with highest priority. With HTTP/2 and HTTP/3 now on the scene, the number of requests is no longer the big deal it used to be. This allows us to separate the CSS into multiple files by media query. The clear benefit of this is the browser can now request the CSS it currently needs with a higher priority than the CSS it doesn’t. This is more performant and can reduce the overall time page rendering is blocked. Which HTTP version are you using? To determine which version of HTTP you’re using, go to your website and open your browser’s dev tools. Next, select the Network tab and make sure the Protocol column is visible. If “h2” is listed under Protocol, it means HTTP/2 is being used. Note: to view the Protocol in your browser’s dev tools, go to the Network tab, reload your page, right-click any column header (e.g., Name), and check the Protocol column. Note: for a summarized comparison, see ImageKit’s “HTTP/2 vs. HTTP/1.” Also, if your site is still using HTTP/1...WHY?!! What are you waiting for? There is excellent user support for HTTP/2. Splitting the CSS Separating the CSS into individual files is a worthwhile task. Linking the separate CSS files using the relevant media attribute allows the browser to identify which files are needed immediately (because they’re render-blocking) and which can be deferred. Based on this, it allocates each file an appropriate priority. In the following example of a website visited on a mobile breakpoint, we can see the mobile and default CSS are loaded with “Highest” priority, as they are currently needed to render the page. The remaining CSS files (print, tablet, and desktop) are still downloaded in case they’ll be needed later, but with “Lowest” priority. With bundled CSS, the browser will have to download the CSS file and parse it before rendering can start.While, as noted, with the CSS separated into different files linked and marked up with the relevant media attribute, the browser can prioritize the files it currently needs. Using closed media query ranges allows the browser to do this at all widths, as opposed to classic mobile-first min-width queries, where the desktop browser would have to download all the CSS with Highest priority. We can’t assume that desktop users always have a fast connection. For instance, in many rural areas, internet connection speeds are still slow. The media queries and number of separate CSS files will vary from project to project based on project requirements, but might look similar to the example below. Bundled CSS <link href="site.css" rel="stylesheet"> This single file contains all the CSS, including all media queries, and it will be downloaded with Highest priority. Separated CSS <link href="default.css" rel="stylesheet"><link href="mobile.css" media="screen and (max-width: 767.98px)" rel="stylesheet"><link href="tablet.css" media="screen and (min-width: 768px) and (max-width: 1083.98px)" rel="stylesheet"><link href="desktop.css" media="screen and (min-width: 1084px)" rel="stylesheet"><link href="print.css" media="print" rel="stylesheet"> Separating the CSS and specifying a media attribute value on each link tag allows the browser to prioritize what it currently needs. Out of the five files listed above, two will be downloaded with Highest priority: the default file, and the file that matches the current media query. The others will be downloaded with Lowest priority. Depending on the project’s deployment strategy, a change to one file (mobile.css, for example) would only require the QA team to regression test on devices in that specific media query range. Compare that to the prospect of deploying the single bundled site.css file, an approach that would normally trigger a full regression test. Moving on The uptake of mobile-first CSS was a really important milestone in web development; it has helped front-end developers focus on mobile web applications, rather than developing sites on desktop and then attempting to retrofit them to work on other devices. I don’t think anyone wants to return to that development model again, but it’s important we don’t lose sight of the issue it highlighted: that things can easily get convoluted and less efficient if we prioritize one particular device—any device—over others. For this reason, focusing on the CSS in its own right, always mindful of what is the default setting and what’s an exception, seems like the natural next step. I’ve started noticing small simplifications in my own CSS, as well as other developers’, and that testing and maintenance work is also a bit more simplified and productive. In general, simplifying CSS rule creation whenever we can is ultimately a cleaner approach than going around in circles of overrides. But whichever methodology you choose, it needs to suit the project. Mobile-first may—or may not—turn out to be the best choice for what’s involved, but first you need to solidly understand the trade-offs you’re stepping into. Full Article
hi To Ignite a Personalization Practice, Run this Prepersonalization Workshop By Published On :: 2024-04-16T19:51:34+00:00 Picture this. You’ve joined a squad at your company that’s designing new product features with an emphasis on automation or AI. Or your company has just implemented a personalization engine. Either way, you’re designing with data. Now what? When it comes to designing for personalization, there are many cautionary tales, no overnight successes, and few guides for the perplexed. Between the fantasy of getting it right and the fear of it going wrong—like when we encounter “persofails” in the vein of a company repeatedly imploring everyday consumers to buy additional toilet seats—the personalization gap is real. It’s an especially confounding place to be a digital professional without a map, a compass, or a plan. For those of you venturing into personalization, there’s no Lonely Planet and few tour guides because effective personalization is so specific to each organization’s talent, technology, and market position. But you can ensure that your team has packed its bags sensibly. Designing for personalization makes for strange bedfellows. A savvy art-installation satire on the challenges of humane design in the era of the algorithm. Credit: Signs of the Times, Scott Kelly and Ben Polkinghome. There’s a DIY formula to increase your chances for success. At minimum, you’ll defuse your boss’s irrational exuberance. Before the party you’ll need to effectively prepare. We call it prepersonalization. Behind the music Consider Spotify’s DJ feature, which debuted this past year. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ok-aNnc0Dko We’re used to seeing the polished final result of a personalization feature. Before the year-end award, the making-of backstory, or the behind-the-scenes victory lap, a personalized feature had to be conceived, budgeted, and prioritized. Before any personalization feature goes live in your product or service, it lives amid a backlog of worthy ideas for expressing customer experiences more dynamically. So how do you know where to place your personalization bets? How do you design consistent interactions that won’t trip up users or—worse—breed mistrust? We’ve found that for many budgeted programs to justify their ongoing investments, they first needed one or more workshops to convene key stakeholders and internal customers of the technology. Make yours count. From Big Tech to fledgling startups, we’ve seen the same evolution up close with our clients. In our experiences with working on small and large personalization efforts, a program’s ultimate track record—and its ability to weather tough questions, work steadily toward shared answers, and organize its design and technology efforts—turns on how effectively these prepersonalization activities play out. Time and again, we’ve seen effective workshops separate future success stories from unsuccessful efforts, saving countless time, resources, and collective well-being in the process. A personalization practice involves a multiyear effort of testing and feature development. It’s not a switch-flip moment in your tech stack. It’s best managed as a backlog that often evolves through three steps: customer experience optimization (CXO, also known as A/B testing or experimentation) always-on automations (whether rules-based or machine-generated) mature features or standalone product development (such as Spotify’s DJ experience) This is why we created our progressive personalization framework and why we’re field-testing an accompanying deck of cards: we believe that there’s a base grammar, a set of “nouns and verbs” that your organization can use to design experiences that are customized, personalized, or automated. You won’t need these cards. But we strongly recommend that you create something similar, whether that might be digital or physical. Set your kitchen timer How long does it take to cook up a prepersonalization workshop? The surrounding assessment activities that we recommend including can (and often do) span weeks. For the core workshop, we recommend aiming for two to three days. Here’s a summary of our broader approach along with details on the essential first-day activities. The full arc of the wider workshop is threefold: Kickstart: This sets the terms of engagement as you focus on the opportunity as well as the readiness and drive of your team and your leadership. . Plan your work: This is the heart of the card-based workshop activities where you specify a plan of attack and the scope of work. Work your plan: This phase is all about creating a competitive environment for team participants to individually pitch their own pilots that each contain a proof-of-concept project, its business case, and its operating model. Give yourself at least a day, split into two large time blocks, to power through a concentrated version of those first two phases. Kickstart: Whet your appetite We call the first lesson the “landscape of connected experience.” It explores the personalization possibilities in your organization. A connected experience, in our parlance, is any UX requiring the orchestration of multiple systems of record on the backend. This could be a content-management system combined with a marketing-automation platform. It could be a digital-asset manager combined with a customer-data platform. Spark conversation by naming consumer examples and business-to-business examples of connected experience interactions that you admire, find familiar, or even dislike. This should cover a representative range of personalization patterns, including automated app-based interactions (such as onboarding sequences or wizards), notifications, and recommenders. We have a catalog of these in the cards. Here’s a list of 142 different interactions to jog your thinking. This is all about setting the table. What are the possible paths for the practice in your organization? If you want a broader view, here’s a long-form primer and a strategic framework. Assess each example that you discuss for its complexity and the level of effort that you estimate that it would take for your team to deliver that feature (or something similar). In our cards, we divide connected experiences into five levels: functions, features, experiences, complete products, and portfolios. Size your own build here. This will help to focus the conversation on the merits of ongoing investment as well as the gap between what you deliver today and what you want to deliver in the future. Next, have your team plot each idea on the following 2×2 grid, which lays out the four enduring arguments for a personalized experience. This is critical because it emphasizes how personalization can not only help your external customers but also affect your own ways of working. It’s also a reminder (which is why we used the word argument earlier) of the broader effort beyond these tactical interventions. Getting intentional about the desired outcomes is an important component to a large-scale personalization program. Credit: Bucket Studio. Each team member should vote on where they see your product or service putting its emphasis. Naturally, you can’t prioritize all of them. The intention here is to flesh out how different departments may view their own upsides to the effort, which can vary from one to the next. Documenting your desired outcomes lets you know how the team internally aligns across representatives from different departments or functional areas. The third and final kickstart activity is about naming your personalization gap. Is your customer journey well documented? Will data and privacy compliance be too big of a challenge? Do you have content metadata needs that you have to address? (We’re pretty sure that you do: it’s just a matter of recognizing the relative size of that need and its remedy.) In our cards, we’ve noted a number of program risks, including common team dispositions. Our Detractor card, for example, lists six stakeholder behaviors that hinder progress. Effectively collaborating and managing expectations is critical to your success. Consider the potential barriers to your future progress. Press the participants to name specific steps to overcome or mitigate those barriers in your organization. As studies have shown, personalization efforts face many common barriers. The largest management consultancies have established practice areas in personalization, and they regularly research program risks and challenges. Credit: Boston Consulting Group. At this point, you’ve hopefully discussed sample interactions, emphasized a key area of benefit, and flagged key gaps? Good—you’re ready to continue. Hit that test kitchen Next, let’s look at what you’ll need to bring your personalization recipes to life. Personalization engines, which are robust software suites for automating and expressing dynamic content, can intimidate new customers. Their capabilities are sweeping and powerful, and they present broad options for how your organization can conduct its activities. This presents the question: Where do you begin when you’re configuring a connected experience? What’s important here is to avoid treating the installed software like it were a dream kitchen from some fantasy remodeling project (as one of our client executives memorably put it). These software engines are more like test kitchens where your team can begin devising, tasting, and refining the snacks and meals that will become a part of your personalization program’s regularly evolving menu. Progressive personalization, a framework for designing connected experiences. Credit: Bucket Studio and Colin Eagan. The ultimate menu of the prioritized backlog will come together over the course of the workshop. And creating “dishes” is the way that you’ll have individual team stakeholders construct personalized interactions that serve their needs or the needs of others. The dishes will come from recipes, and those recipes have set ingredients. In the same way that ingredients form a recipe, you can also create cards to break down a personalized interaction into its constituent parts. Credit: Bucket Studio and Colin Eagan. Verify your ingredients Like a good product manager, you’ll make sure—andyou’ll validate with the right stakeholders present—that you have all the ingredients on hand to cook up your desired interaction (or that you can work out what needs to be added to your pantry). These ingredients include the audience that you’re targeting, content and design elements, the context for the interaction, and your measure for how it’ll come together. This isn’t just about discovering requirements. Documenting your personalizations as a series of if-then statements lets the team: compare findings toward a unified approach for developing features, not unlike when artists paint with the same palette; specify a consistent set of interactions that users find uniform or familiar; and develop parity across performance measurements and key performance indicators too. This helps you streamline your designs and your technical efforts while you deliver a shared palette of core motifs of your personalized or automated experience. Compose your recipe What ingredients are important to you? Think of a who-what-when-why construct: Who are your key audience segments or groups? What kind of content will you give them, in what design elements, and under what circumstances? And for which business and user benefits? We first developed these cards and card categories five years ago. We regularly play-test their fit with conference audiences and clients. And we still encounter new possibilities. But they all follow an underlying who-what-when-why logic.Here are three examples for a subscription-based reading app, which you can generally follow along with right to left in the cards in the accompanying photo below. Nurture personalization: When a guest or an unknown visitor interacts with a product title, a banner or alert bar appears that makes it easier for them to encounter a related title they may want to read, saving them time. Welcome automation: When there’s a newly registered user, an email is generated to call out the breadth of the content catalog and to make them a happier subscriber. Winback automation: Before their subscription lapses or after a recent failed renewal, a user is sent an email that gives them a promotional offer to suggest that they reconsider renewing or to remind them to renew. A “nurture” automation may trigger a banner or alert box that promotes content that makes it easier for users to complete a common task, based on behavioral profiling of two user types. Credit: Bucket Studio. A “welcome” automation may be triggered for any user that sends an email to help familiarize them with the breadth of a content library, and this email ideally helps them consider selecting various titles (no matter how much time they devote to reviewing the email’s content itself). Credit: Bucket Studio. A “winback” automation may be triggered for a specific group, such as users with recently failed credit-card transactions or users at risk of churning out of active usage, that present them with a specific offer to mitigate near-future inactivity. Credit: Bucket Studio. A useful preworkshop activity may be to think through a first draft of what these cards might be for your organization, although we’ve also found that this process sometimes flows best through cocreating the recipes themselves. Start with a set of blank cards, and begin labeling and grouping them through the design process, eventually distilling them to a refined subset of highly useful candidate cards. You can think of the later stages of the workshop as moving from recipes toward a cookbook in focus—like a more nuanced customer-journey mapping. Individual “cooks” will pitch their recipes to the team, using a common jobs-to-be-done format so that measurability and results are baked in, and from there, the resulting collection will be prioritized for finished design and delivery to production. Better kitchens require better architecture Simplifying a customer experience is a complicated effort for those who are inside delivering it. Beware anyone who says otherwise. With that being said, “Complicated problems can be hard to solve, but they are addressable with rules and recipes.” When personalization becomes a laugh line, it’s because a team is overfitting: they aren’t designing with their best data. Like a sparse pantry, every organization has metadata debt to go along with its technical debt, and this creates a drag on personalization effectiveness. Your AI’s output quality, for example, is indeed limited by your IA. Spotify’s poster-child prowess today was unfathomable before they acquired a seemingly modest metadata startup that now powers its underlying information architecture. You can definitely stand the heat… Personalization technology opens a doorway into a confounding ocean of possible designs. Only a disciplined and highly collaborative approach will bring about the necessary focus and intention to succeed. So banish the dream kitchen. Instead, hit the test kitchen to save time, preserve job satisfaction and security, and safely dispense with the fanciful ideas that originate upstairs of the doers in your organization. There are meals to serve and mouths to feed. This workshop framework gives you a fighting shot at lasting success as well as sound beginnings. Wiring up your information layer isn’t an overnight affair. But if you use the same cookbook and shared recipes, you’ll have solid footing for success. We designed these activities to make your organization’s needs concrete and clear, long before the hazards pile up. While there are associated costs toward investing in this kind of technology and product design, your ability to size up and confront your unique situation and your digital capabilities is time well spent. Don’t squander it. The proof, as they say, is in the pudding. Full Article
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hi Ten-month-old child from Karur undergoes rare bone marrow transplantation in Coimbatore By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 20:26:15 +0530 Full Article Coimbatore
hi Watch: Coimbatore’s women cops are now maintaining weapons, driving heavy vehicles, and more By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 17:33:57 +0530 Policewomen in Coimbatore are challenging norms by taking on roles traditionally reserved for men Full Article Coimbatore
hi Coconut farmers buoyed by 15% higher rate for copra in local market, arrival in regulated markets muted By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 20:04:10 +0530 The spike in demand for coconuts for local consumption has inevitably caused lesser copra conversion, eventually leading to the price-rise for the product in the local market Full Article Coimbatore
hi Gutkha seized from Tiruchi-bound vehicle By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 20:12:51 +0530 Full Article Coimbatore
hi CPI(M) members submit petitions to Tiruppur City Corporation demanding rollback of property tax hike By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:50:03 +0530 Full Article Coimbatore
hi How to explore the misty hills of Attuvampatti Crush in Kodaikanal? By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:45:35 +0530 Breathe in pollution-free air and enjoy farm-to-table food and learn what makes Kodai plums so unique Full Article Life & Style
hi Women make film : una nueva road movie a lo largo de la historia del cine (2018) / written and directed by Mark Cousins [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [Spain] : Avalon, [2020] Full Article
hi Su liao wang guo = Plastic China (2016) / dao yan she ying, Wang Jiuliang / directed & cinematographed by Jiu-liang Wang [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Taibei Shi : Shi na hua ren wen hua chuan bo gu fen you xian gong si, [2019] Full Article
hi Séraphine (2008) / written and directed by Martin Provost [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [U.K.] : Metrodome, [2010] Full Article
hi Secrets of nature : pioneering natural history films (1922-1933) / directed by Percy Smith, Oliver Pike, Charles Head, H. A. Gilbert, Walter Higham [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [U.K.] : British Film Institute, [2010] Full Article
hi Port of flowers (1943) / directed by Keisuke Kinoshita [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [New York] : Criterion Collection, [2014] Full Article
hi Morning for the Osone family (1946) / directed by Keisuke Kinoshita [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [New York] : Criterion Collection, [2014] Full Article
hi The living Magoroku (1943) / directed by Keisuke Kinoshita [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [New York] : Criterion Collection, [2014] Full Article
hi Khodorkovsky : how the richest man in Russia became its most famous political prisoner (2011) / written, produced and directed by Cyril Tuschi [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [U.K.] : Trinity film, [2012] Full Article
hi Jubilation street (1944) / directed by Keisuke Kinoshita [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [New York] : Criterion Collection, [2014] Full Article
hi Himmelskibet (1918) / directed by Holger-Madsen [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [Denmark] : Danske Filminstitut, [2006] Full Article
hi Closed curtain (2013) / starring, edited, produced, written and directed by Jafar Panahi [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [U.K.] : New Wave Films, [2013] Full Article
hi Bala (2019) / directed by Amar Kaushik [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [India] : Shemaroo, [2020] Full Article
hi Army (1944) / directed by Keisuke Kinoshita [DVD]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [New York] : Criterion Collection, [2014] Full Article
hi Pran: The 'Life' of Hindi Cinema By www.thehindubusinessline.com Published On :: Sat, 13 Jul 2013 19:40:23 +0530 Full Article Aesha Datta
hi RUNC: Karthik Ramakrishnan By endeavors.unc.edu Published On :: Tue, 22 Oct 2024 12:57:02 +0000 Karthik Ramakrishnan harnesses physics to study diseases in the brain and the heart. The post RUNC: Karthik Ramakrishnan appeared first on UNC Research Stories. Full Article Earth Research UNCovered biology Biomedical Engineering neuroscience physics student UNC College of Arts and Science UNC Research UNC School of Medicine UNC-Chapel Hill undergraduate undergraduate student