Here, we’ve broken those into four parts: learn, practice, celebrate, and support. We cannot not engage. Months ago, Google Design shared resources on designing for equity, and today I’d like to continue that conversation with resources focused on action. Our team has found agency in culling our respective feeds for ways to take action. I grieve and stand alongside them in solidarity and in the fight against racism and hatred. As Google’s Eva Tsai, Director, Marketing Analytics and Operations, shared in a recent essay for the Keyword: “Outrunning and dismissing injustice is no longer an option.” We cannot afford to be silent. What I didn’t share was the extent of the bias, sexism, and racism I’ve encountered throughout my life. I continue to be deeply angered by the shootings in Atlanta that left eight people dead, including six women of Asian descent-an inevitable crescendo to a year of mounting violence and hatred towards the Asian American, Pacific Islander, and Asian communities.
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Yet even the savviest design solution can lay bare another issue-and this aha / uh-oh cycle forms the iterative process that’s now the cornerstone of thoughtful, quality design. Here, three UX practitioners discuss their work at the forefront of digital wellbeing, exploring how a digital ecosystem, or digisphere, that’s developed with empathy has the power to change our future for the better.įor this post, we handed the keyboard over to UX Director and Google Design team lead Margaret Lee. Earlier this month, I shared my story on navigating the mismatch between personal upbringing and professional roles. With a focus on human-tech interactions, these practitioners wrestle with the paradox of technology every day.
This mission is carried out by product teams that include user experience (UX) practitioners and AI researchers. At Google, we’re working to examine and evolve this balance through the concept of digital wellbeing, so that technology can improve peoples’ lives, not distract from them. But each breakthrough brings with it new challenges. In this Digital Age, screens and smart tech have become incredible means of connection-portals to other places, people, and emotions-but our relationship with our devices is complex, and sometimes fraught. Each period plays a role in shaping the next, with everything interconnected in a continuous cycle. Ages are even defined by technological medium-from stone, to bronze, to industrial, and now, digital.