As one of the beta products from Autodesk Platform Services, Data Exchange needs to expand its customer base as it evolves. User experience is vital for improving customer engagement, retention, and overall product growth. As a designer, I’ve been actively evangelizing the products:
James Dyson, the inventor of the dual cyclone vacuum cleaner that bears his name, discusses one of its design features—the transparent plastic cylinder within which the rubbish collects—in his autobiography:
A journalist who came to interview me once asked, ‘The area where the dirt collects is transparent, thus parading all our detritus on the outside and turning the classic design inside out. Is this some post-modernist nod to the architectural style pioneered by Richard Rodgers at the Pompidou Centre, where the air-conditioning and escalators, the very guts, are made into a self-referential design feature?’
‘No,’ I replied. ‘It’s so you can see when it’s full.’
(From "Against the Odds" by James Dyson and Giles Coren, Texere 2001)
It is my aim to keep this book as simple, straightforward, and jargon-free as possible.
— From "Basic Structures" by Philip Garrison, a user-friendly classic among technical books
Do | Don’t |
---|---|
Trade contractors | Third-party vendors |
Non-Autodesk libraries | Third-party libraries |
Beta user | Beta customer |
BIM | AEC Data Model |
Revit build-in parameters* | Build-in parameters* |
*There's additional depth to this narrative. This is a simplified version of the real story.
Do | Don’t |
---|---|
Parameter: {EU-FireRating: “A1”} | Parameter: {“Parameter 1”: “String A”} |
Element: Beams, Columns, Roofs | Element: Sphere, cylinder |
“Autodesk Data Exchange is under active development. Stay tuned.”