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lollypopvietnam · 12 days ago
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Thiết kế sản phẩm (Product Design) là gì? Quy trình thiết kế sản phẩm tại Lollypop
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Hãy cùng Lollypop khám phá sâu hơn về khái niệm "Product Design", cũng như tìm hiểu về các yếu tố tạo nên một thiết kế sản phẩm chất lượng và khám phá quy trình thiết kế sản phẩm tại Lollypop.
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aliciahedison · 2 years ago
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UI/UX Design: Definitions and Design Process with a Case Study
UI/UX design plays a crucial role in the product development process, as it’s responsible for creating visually appealing products that provide exceptional user journeys. A well-designed UI/UX can have a significant impact on how users perceive and interact with a product or service, influencing their decision to stay or leave the business. While UX and UI design are closely related, they have distinct roles in the design process. Clarifying these roles is essential for creating an efficient workflow and producing high-quality design projects.
So, what are the differences between UX and UI design? How do UI and UX designers work together in an agile design process? Let’s discover through this blog!
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citrus259 · 3 years ago
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GGGRRRAAAAARRRRGGGGHHHHHHHH!!!!!!
The following is a frustrated vent, please scroll rapidly if you don’t want a wall of text.
My darling mother is in hospital for the 7(8?)th time this year. She’s been in for lung and heart issues, mostly, but most recently has been in after fracturing a couple of ribs.
First one, she was coughing quite hard, then stood up, felt a clunk, and was unable to move without pain for a time. Couldn’t sit, stand, get in to bed, pick things up, bend over, without pain. She did not see a physician for this. 2 weeks later, she’s pulling clothes out of the washing machine, feels another clunk, more pain, less ability to move, dad drives her to the hospital, at her request. She has 2 fractured ribs! 1 from 2 weeks ago, one from the laundry.
She messages my sister and I saying she is in hospital. Spends 3 weeks asking if we’ve called dad to check up on him, he’s worried, he’s going through it, he’s stressed. We both wonder why she has told us she’s in hospital, and not him.
While in hospital, on IV pain meds, she decides to get out of bed, unassisted, to go to the bathroom. Attempts to get back into bed, unassisted. 3rd clunk.
She gets sent home after 3 weeks. Their neighbour friend has come to the house a couple days before she has come home to tidy, because dad has not lifted a finger in that time.
In this time, the doctors tell her to do lung exercises for her COPD. She calls me and tells me to start doing lung exercises now and not wait until I’m 70 to begin. This would be good advice if I had bad lungs. She does not offer this advice to my sister, who has had asthma since age 6.
She continues to be in pain, doing all housework, being her normal mum-self, despite being unwell. Dad continues to do nothing, contact nobody, and take care of his animals.
3 days ago, mum “bends the wrong way” (her words) re-fractures a rib, goes back to hospital. She alerts us, again, not dad. She proceeds to tell us we should call him, he’s worried about her, he’s stressed.
On the phone with her and my sister today, she deftly avoids any questions about her actual diagnosis, as always, and changes the subject to work. Within 5 minutes tells us; I should find a new job that pays better, anything, even a lollypop lady; she has spoken to my niece about me “wasting my mind” (I am a former gifted child) and that I need to “use my brain for something MORE”; and my BIL working evening/night shifts, not being able to be with his family is “at least paying the bills, thats all that matters”. If you can’t see the vast contradictions in all 3 of those statements then you’re on the same page as her.
The woman shits me to fucking tears. I am incredibly worried for her, and am quite pissed off at my father for 1. Not taking better care of her, 2. Not making sure she’s taking better care of herself, 3. Not bothering to contact my sister and I about our mother’s health, and 4. Not being vaccinated, meaning we can’t visit her, per NSW COVID restrictions.
Also, his reasoning behind not being vaccinated, which I would accept if it were for health reasons, but no. His reasoning at first was that if he booked an appointment for a jab, he’d “have to wait” for said appointment, and now his reasoning is that the chemists who are accepting walk-in patients are “chinks” which I personally find to be disgusting, and honestly thought that his casual racism had abated more than that. He may be a “product of his time” but he also lived through the 50’s, 60’s, 70’s, 80’s, 90’s 00’s, and 10’s. MLK, Vietnam, BLM, Stonewall, Berlin, every major historical event in modern history, he has lived through, but he has apparently not learned from a single one. I struggle to understand how somebody so staunchly Right-Wing has managed to keep a level-headed wife who was raised to believe in the rights of all people, and raise 2 daughters who believe everybody, regardless of race, creed, or colour, is equal.
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usnewsaggregator-blog · 7 years ago
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Cultured Traveler: Where to See (Really See) the Art of Maya Lin
New Post has been published on http://usnewsaggregator.com/cultured-traveler-where-to-see-really-see-the-art-of-maya-lin/
Cultured Traveler: Where to See (Really See) the Art of Maya Lin
A wellspring of Ms. Lin’s work is New Haven. She went to Yale College in the late 1970s, later receiving an architecture degree there. It seemed natural when Yale turned to Ms. Lin in the late 1980s to mark the 20th anniversary of coeducation at Yale after nearly two centuries of being all male. “Maya Lin has in many ways motivated an entire generation of Yale students,” said Yale’s current president, Peter Salovey, introducing her at a recent campus lecture.
Providence
Long Island Sound
Atlantic Ocean
LONG ISLAND
Ms. Lin came up with an unconventional approach for her commission, designing a “water table” where a thin layer of water streams over the oval-shaped face of the sculpture. Her “Women’s Table” is in a central location on Rose Walk, not far from Old Campus and a few footsteps from the main Sterling Library. Yet it also manages to be a serene spot.
The table is inscribed with a sea of numbers in an exquisite spiral. Ms. Lin marks the presence, and absence, of female students through the years, creating a strong statement and pattern. After many years of zeros, the number grows quickly in the 1970s and ’80s, getting to 5,225 women enrolled at Yale in 1993 when the sculpture was finished. It is a meditation on social and gender progress. She is meticulous in her design: the stone is “Lake Placid Blue” as her homage to Yale’s blue and numerals use Bembo font as a link to Yale publications.
“The Women’s Table” is understated, like so much of her work. Though it carries no explanation on it, people seem to appreciate it whether they fully understand its context or not.
Connecticut
Alexander Calder,
“Gallows and Lollypops”
Beinecke Rare Book &
Manuscript Library
Woolsey Hall
Sterling
Memorial
Library
Isamu Noguchi,
“Pyramid, Sun and Cube”
“The Women’s Table”
COLLEGE ST.
Yale University
“‘The Women’s Table’ is an important landmark,” said Joyce Hsiang, assistant dean of Yale’s School of Architecture and a Yale alumnus who admires Ms. Lin. “We’ve seen many public gatherings, protests or conversations happen using the Women’s Table as a platform empowering those whose voices aren’t heard. Beyond that symbolic and civic role, it really is a wonderful central place that the community gathers around.”
Within a few blocks are a number of other world-class sculpture and architectural pieces. Outside the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library featuring Gordon Bunshaft’s design using translucent marble, there is an Isamu Noguchi (“Pyramid, Sun, and Cube”) sculpture and an Alexander Calder (“Gallows and Lollipops”).
Also nearby is Yale’s memorial to alumni killed in wars. Ms. Lin passed through the Memorial Rotunda in Woolsey Hall often as a student. “I had never been able to resist touching the names cut into these marble walls,” Ms. Lin wrote about the Rotunda. “It left a lasting impression on me … the sense of the power of a name.” In her freshman and sophomore years, stonecutters carved names of those from Yale killed in Vietnam, which she has cited as an influence on her work on the Washington memorial and beyond.
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A hundred miles from New Haven is another Lin “table,” this one installed in Providence in 2015. When Brown University established the Institute at Brown for Environment & Society, it renovated a building on Waterman Street on the city’s east side, emphasizing sustainability in the design by Toshiko Mori. Brown wanted public sculpture outside, and Ms. Mori offered to introduce Brown’s public art committee to Ms. Lin. It was a match.
Rhode Island
Institute at Brown
for Environment & Society
Providence
ANGELL ST.
WATERMAN ST.
Henry Moore,
“Reclining Figure
No. 2 Bridge Prop”
“Under the
Laurentide”
Giuseppe Penone,
“Idee di Pietra”
Urs Fischer,
S. MAIN ST.
“Untitled (Lamp/Bear)”
GEORGE ST.
BENEFIT ST.
Brown University
CHARLESFIELD ST.
“Under the Laurentide” uses a huge piece of Chelmsford granite intricately sculpted to show a topological map of the bottom of Narragansett Bay. From April through October (the Yale piece’s water is off in winter too), water gently flows across the surface, nearly silent, mimicking the natural course of several rivers into the bay. It is a quiet spot for rest and reflection, and small birds often jump into the water. Laurentide refers to the massive ice sheet that covered most of Canada and the northern United States during an ice age, and the piece brings attention to Narragansett Bay and current efforts to clean up pollution.
Nearby on the Brown campus are two new pieces of public art — Urs Fischer’s “Untitled (Lamp/Bear),” a 23-foot-tall baby blue teddy bear, and Giuseppe Penone’s “Idee di pietra (Ideas of Stone).” Near the Penone piece on the Main Green is one of Brown’s oldest and most distinguished public sculptures: Henry Moore’s “Reclining Figure No. 2 — Bridge Prop.” Close by on history-rich Benefit Street are many preserved colonial-era houses, painted in vivid colors.
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“Gallows and Lollipops” by Alexander Calder in New Haven, Conn. Credit Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
An hour from Providence by car or public bus is Newport, a seaside resort with Gilded Age mansions. It was also the site of the biggest controversy over a Lin design since her Vietnam Memorial.
The project, “The Meeting Room,” had its roots in the life of Doris Duke, the colorful billionaire heiress who helped remake Newport through philanthropic and restoration work. One key location was Queen Anne Square, an acre of parkland overlooking the harbor in the center of the city. Ms. Duke died in 1993, and two decades later her foundation wanted to remake the deteriorating square again.
Ms. Lin was hired to do the redesign, yet enthusiasm turned to discord with factions debating the plan’s usefulness and attractiveness. Ms. Lin’s aim was to show layers of history and make the park more inviting. Critics called it ersatz history and said the park would become less comfortable — “Some kind of Disneyland fake,” one critic called it.
In the end, Ms. Lin’s plan was approved and completed in 2013. She created three distinctive open-air spaces she calls “rooms.” She used salvaged local stones as foundations on the actual footprints of buildings on the site in 1777, 1876, and 1907. Ms. Lin said she was inspired to provide accessible meeting places by the founder of Rhode Island, Roger Williams, and his drive to give people freedom.
Visiting the park made me wonder what the controversy had been about. The “rooms” are minimalist without walls or roofs but thoroughly inviting for people to sit or walk in. They have become popular casual meeting spaces and places to linger. The park’s disrepair is gone and it is a bright, clean place. The park seems at peace with the surrounding area, most notably Trinity Church from 1725 that towers over. Historic inscriptions in the rooms add texture and the effect of the quotes and stones is cumulative. I felt drawn back to the Colonial and other historic periods, imagining the earlier lives in these rooms.
Rhode Island
WASHINGTON ST.
EUSTIS AVE.
THAMES ST.
Trinity Church
Newport
Harbor
Queen Ann Square
Easton
Bay
The Foundation Room includes another Lin water table. Water burbles softly from an invisible source onto the long stone carrying an inscription drawn from the account book of a Newport stone mason, John Stevens, in 1726. Stevens’ shop, started in 1705, survives nearby as one of the oldest continuously operating businesses in the United States. Ms. Lin has worked with the shop on many projects, including the Vietnam Memorial and the Women’s Table.
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Just 75 miles away from Newport is Ms. Lin’s most recent and largest New England project. At 181 Massachusetts Avenue in Cambridge’s Kendall Square neighborhood, she designed a large office and biomedical research facility for Novartis, the global pharmaceutical company.
The walk to Ms. Lin’s Novartis building from the Kendall Square Red Line subway stop on the T is five minutes and a good introduction to a remarkable area called by the Boston Consulting Group “the most innovative square mile on earth.” What once had been a dirty industrial area has been transformed into a hub for research and development facilities, which in turn have generated a raft of restaurants, residences, and shops. Big Pharma, Big Tech, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology rule the streets, though quietly, not ostentatiously.
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“Untitled (Lamp/Bear)” by Urs Fischer in Providence, R.I. Credit Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
An architectural treat on the way to Ms. Lin’s 2015 building is Frank Gehry’s Ray and Maria Stata Center, an academic complex for M.I.T. that opened in 2004. It’s an imaginative structure, fun to see and walk around.
Ms. Lin’s building is striking from blocks away as you see its covering of interlocking blocks of granite. The facade’s unusual perforated stone screen wraps the main building’s exterior and is supported by an aluminum curtain wall — Ms. Lin said it was inspired by microscopic views of bone structure. She did the master plan for the three-building Novartis campus that includes her building; a lovely, small public park; an older research building; and another large new building designed by the same Ms. Mori who recommended her in Providence. Because of angles and irregularities of the street grid, the Lin building from some places can almost look like two different buildings
The building was an immediate hit. Robert Campbell, the Boston Globe’s architecture critic, wrote it has “the energy of exploration” and is “the most interesting new building in town.”
Massachusetts
Novartis Institutes
for BioMedical
Research
KENDALL
SQUARE
Kendall Red Line station
Ray and Maria Stata Center
Massachusetts
Institute of
Technology
Charles R.
STORROW DR.
As research facilities are serious about their secrecy, the interiorof Ms. Lin’s Novartis building is private besides the lobby and retail spaces on Massachusetts Avenue’s streetfront. But her building can be viewed from many vantage points on the streets and park nearby, and you can go into the lobby to see what you can before the security entry — including a high, bright atrium with a mass of wood and tall plants and an ingenious sculpture made of hundreds of straight pins. Outside, there is water pooling around a big, round column of the building. It is mesmerizing and comforting. And a glass wall has patterns looking like flowers and also conjuring up the human genome.
Novartis put a high value on the architecture enabling collaboration among researchers, and the company said scientists working in the labs have been pleased by what Ms. Lin designed. The whole place looks and feels smart. The angling of the building promotes captivating reflections, including of other nearby buildings.
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As the architecture critic Paul Goldberger writes about the Novartis project in “Maya Lin Topologies,” a book of photographs and essays about her work, “Lin has begun to work with greater constraints than she has ever had. She knows that the greatest challenge of all is not to design without restrictions, but to accept the constraints and then, just as she has done, show that in spite of them you can bring real architecture into being.”
Much of Ms. Lin’s focus now is on environmental work, including what she calls her last memorial, “What Is Missing?,” a multimedia project based at whatismissing.net and aimed at being a global effort to help protect and restore nature. But she continues to design buildings too, including another large one to come in New England: a library at Smith College in Northampton, Mass. Ground was broken this month and it is scheduled for completion in 2020.
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“Under the Laurentide” by Maya Lin in Providence, R.I. Credit Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
If You Go
Where to Stay in New Haven
The Study at Yale has no formal connection to the university, but is a bright, spacious hotel with many academic-like touches, such as leather reading chairs and books in the lobby. It is a short walk from the Yale campus and museums, and less than 10 minutes on foot from the Maya Lin sculpture; 1157 Chapel Street, thestudyatyale.com.
Where to Eat in New Haven
Claire’s Corner Copia is a lively, delicious vegetarian (and kosher) restaurant that has been serving the Yale community and beyond since 1975. It’s a bright place with a wide variety of creative food choices for breakfast, lunch and dinner; 1008 Chapel Street, clairescornercopia.com.
Where to Stay in Providence
The Hampton Inn & Suites Providence Downtown is a comfortable hotel (included in the room price is an excellent full breakfast) convenient to College Hill, including the Maya Lin sculpture and Benefit Street; 58 Weybosset Street.
Where to Eat in Providence
For casual fare just a few blocks from the Lin sculpture, bustling East Side Pockets serves outstanding falafel, gyros, and other Mediterranean food; 278 Thayer Street, eastsidepocket.com. For something more, Hemenway’s is a superb seafood restaurant at the bottom of College Hill; 121 South Main Street, hemenwaysrestaurant.com.
Where to Stay in Newport
The Mill Street Inn was for many years a small mill, and it was painstakingly turned into a luxury all-suite hotel. Close to the heart of Newport — and about a two-minute walk to Ms. Lin’s Queen Anne Square — it is quietly set off from the bustle of town; 75 Mill Street, millstreetinn.com.
Where to Eat in Newport
The Mooring is an excellent seafood restaurant on the harbor (and with a memorable dessert: the Take Five Pie); Sayer’s Wharf, mooringrestaurant.com. The Corner Café, a little removed from the waterfront, is near City Hall on the re-energized Broadway. It has eclectic fare, including Portuguese and Irish in addition to American; 110 Broadway, cornercafenewport.com.
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Where to Stay in Cambridge
The Kendall Square Hotel is a stylish yet cozy hotel that is in a renovated firehouse. The location is central to the M.I.T. area of Cambridge and less than 10 minutes by foot from Maya Lin’s Novartis building; 350 Main Street, kendallhotel.com.
Where to Eat in Cambridge
Flour is a terrific chain of Boston bakeries/cafes, and one of them is directly across the street from Maya Lin’s Novartis building, making it a great place to sit and eat or drink while you look at the building; 190 Massachusetts Avenue, flourbakery.com/locations/central-square.
A Bonus in New York City
For travelers making a Maya Lin New England trip with New York City’s Penn Station at the start or ending point, there’s a bonus. Her “Eclipsed Time” sculpture, installed in 1994 high above the Long Island Railroad’s corridor near 34th Street and Seventh Avenue, is a wonderful conceptual clock.
Despite its location in such a busy place, and perhaps because of that, it is has gone largely unnoticed through the years. Using light, it tracks a rough rather than precise sense of time rather more like a sundial (a plaque even says not to set your watch by it). Like much in Ms. Lin’s work, it is thought-provoking and beautiful.
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lollypopvietnam · 2 months ago
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Design Outsourcing: Giải pháp thiết kế tối ưu chi phí cho doanh nghiệp
Thị trường số tại Việt Nam đã có sự tăng trưởng đáng kể qua từng năm. Theo báo cáo của We Are Social (2023), số người dùng Internet tại Việt Nam đã đạt khoảng 77.93 triệu, tăng khoảng 7.5% so với năm 2022. Xu hướng này cho thấy tầm quan trọng của việc thiết kế Website hoặc thiết kế phần mềm trong việc tiếp cận khách hàng tiềm năng.
Khi bàn về việc thiết kế sản phẩm (Product Design), hầu hết các doanh nghiệp thường chọn giữa Xây dựng đội ngũ thiết kế nội bộ (In-house) hoặc Thuê các đơn vị cung cấp dịch vụ thiết kế bên ngoài (Outsource). Mỗi cách tiếp cận sẽ đi kèm với những lợi ích cũng như rủi ro riêng. Việc lựa chọn hướng đi nào sẽ phụ thuộc vào tình hình thực tế của từng doanh nghiệp. 
Trong đó, một trường hợp mà doanh nghiệp nên ưu tiên Design Outsourcing hơn là khi Design không phải thế mạnh cốt lõi. Peter Drucker, chuyên gia hàng đầu về Tư vấn Quản trị, từng nói: “Do what you do best and outsource the rest”, tức là tập trung vào những việc doanh nghiệp bạn làm tốt nhất và “outsourcing” – “chọn mặt gửi vàng” những phần việc còn lại. 
Vậy về tổng thể “Design Outsourcing” là gì? Chiến lược này có những ưu điểm và nhược điểm gì? Làm sao để lựa chọn đúng đối tác Outsource thiết kế? Hãy cùng Lollypop Việt Nam đi sâu phân tích trong bài viết này nhé!
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lollypopvietnam · 2 months ago
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💡UX Problems - Nhóm 3: Lỗi UX tạo giới hạn trải nghiệm
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Khi công nghệ và các xu hướng ngày càng phát triển, kỳ vọng của người dùng cũng ngày một lớn hơn! Dưới đây sẽ là các lỗi trong UX khiến trải nghiệm người dùng Website/App bị giới hạn bởi một số hạn chế nhất định.
📌Tìm hiểu thêm về giải pháp cho các UX Problems trong Blog của Lollypop
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lollypopvietnam · 2 months ago
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💡UX Problems - Nhóm 2: Lỗi UX dẫn đến trường hợp không lường trước
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Khi thực hiện một tác vụ trên Website/App, người dùng sẽ có những mường tượng nhất định về các bước thực hiện. Tuy nhiên, các lỗi UX dưới đây sẽ khiến họ phần nào bị bối rối, dẫn đến việc không thể hoàn thành như mong đợi.
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lollypopvietnam · 5 months ago
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Design System: Explained, Explored, and Evaluated
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In recent years, the world of digital design has been booming! There are tons of apps and websites out there, and even more are being created all the time. These apps and websites can be complex, with hundreds or even thousands of different screens.
This raises a crucial question: “How can global businesses manage to design all this stuff efficiently, especially when they have so many employees working on different projects? Here’s the secret: they use something called “Design system”!
This blog post by Lollypop will explain the design system definition, the pros and cons of using it, and even show some examples from big brands, like Apple, Google, and Microsoft. 
So, if you’ve ever wondered how companies keep their apps and websites looking consistent, you’ve come to the right place! Let’s dive in! 
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lollypopvietnam · 6 months ago
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Ứng dụng tâm lý học màu sắc và cách phối màu trong Brand Identity
Bạn có biết?
Màu ❤️ có khả năng kích thích cảm giác thèm ăn, do đó thường được ưa dùng bởi các thương hiệu Fastfood (KFC, Lotteria, Pizza Hut,...).
Trong đó, màu 💙 lại được sử dụng phổ biến trong lĩnh vực công nghệ (Facebook, Samsung & IBM), khi nó mang lại cảm giác minh bạch, hiện đại và an toàn.
Thật vậy, màu sắc có tác động sâu sắc đến suy nghĩ của con người! Nó có khả năng hình thành nhận thức và thậm chí thúc đẩy việc ra quyết định.
Theo Hubspot, 80% người tiêu dùng có những đánh giá hoặc cảm nhận ban đầu về thương hiệu chỉ dựa trên màu sắc chủ đạo của Brand!
Và nếu bạn muốn hiểu sâu thêm về tâm lý học đằng sau các màu sắc, hãy xem ngay bài blog mới nhất của Lollypop trong link dưới đây
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lollypopvietnam · 6 months ago
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Tại Sao Thiết Kế UI Cho Ngành Y Tế Thường Ưu Tiên Màu Sắc Tươi Sáng và Nhẹ Nhàng?
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Khi bạn đặt chân vào một bệnh viện hoặc sử dụng một ứng dụng y tế, có lẽ bạn đã nhận thấy rằng màu sắc thường được chọn là những gam màu tươi sáng, nhẹ nhàng như xanh dương nhạt, xanh lá cây, hoặc màu pastel.
Điều này không phải là sự ngẫu nhiên!
Việc chọn màu sắc tươi sáng và nhẹ nhàng trong thiết kế UI cho ngành y tế không chỉ là về vấn đề thẩm mỹ mà còn là về việc tạo ra một môi trường trải nghiệm tích cực, thân thiện, an toàn và thoải mái cho người dùng, từ bệnh nhân đến nhân viên y tế. Song song đó thể hiện sự chuyên nghiệp và tinh tế của đội ngũ y tế.
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lollypopvietnam · 27 days ago
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Cuộc thi thiết kế Lollypop Designathon 2024: 24h bùng nổ sáng tạo
Lollypop Designathon Vietnam 2024 - Cuộc thi thiết kế UI/UX đặc trưng của Lollypop Design Studio là một chơi sáng tạo hoành tráng, nơi những ý tưởng táo bạo nhất của giới thiết kế trẻ Việt Nam được thăng hoa! Mùa giải năm nay, với sự trở lại đầy bùng nổ, đã một lần nữa khẳng định tầm ảnh hưởng mạnh mẽ của Lollypop Design Studio trong cộng đồng thiết kế.
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lollypopvietnam · 3 months ago
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Bộ Tứ Ban Giám Khảo tại Designathon 2024 🌟
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Cùng khám phá dàn Ban Giám Khảo "xịn sò", những người sẽ "cầm cân nảy mực" để tìm ra các đội thi suất sắc nhất trong cuộc thi năm nay nhé!
📌 Thái Lâm - Product Design Manager @Axon
Với hơn 10 năm chinh chiến trong lĩnh vực UX, Product & Growth, anh Thái Lâm là gương mặt đã gắn bó với nhiều công ty công nghệ hàng đầu như Baemin, Seedcom, Zalo, và Lazada. Anh cũng là Nhà sáng lập của UXVN, cộng đồng chất lượng dành cho những người đam mê UX tại Việt Nam.
📌 Tony Nguyễn - Head of Design & Development @Lollypop Design Studio
Xuất thân là một Software Engineer, anh Tony Nguyễn đã vận dụng tư duy sắc bén cùng kỹ năng quản lý chặt chẽ của mình trong suốt 12 năm để dẫn dắt những dự án nghiên cứu, thiết kế và phát triển sản phẩm số trọng điểm của Lollypop với các nhiều doanh nghiệp lớn trong ngành Finance, E-commerce, Edtech, Retail,…
📌 Tuệ Ngô - Associate Product Director @MoMo (M_Service)
Với nền tảng từ ngành Kỹ thuật Máy tính tại Đại học Bách khoa TP.HCM, anh Tuệ Ngô ��ang giữ vai trò Head of Product cho các nhánh sản phẩm Growth, Bank, Risk, Sources of Fund của MoMo. Bên cạnh đó, anh còn hỗ trợ giảng dạy môn Product Development tại đại học Fullbright - chương trình đào tạo Product Owner/Product Manager chính quy đầu tiên ở Việt Nam.
📌 Khánh Phạm - Associate Lecturer, Design Studies @RMIT University Vietnam
Với hơn 10 năm kinh nghiệm trong Graphics, Motion, và Industrial Design, anh Khánh Phạm đã tham gia nhiều dự án thuộc Sở Giao dịch Chứng khoán Việt Nam, Robb Report Vietnam, và UNESCO. Hiện anh là Giảng viên Thiết kế tại Đại học RMIT Việt Nam, nơi anh chia sẻ niềm đam mê và kiến thức với thế hệ Designer tương lai.
Bốn giám khảo với đa dạng background và các thế mạnh chuyên môn chuyên biệt hứa hẹn sẽ có những "cán cân công lý" uy tín, mang đến cho thí sinh những nhận định sắc bén và giá trị. 
#Designathon2024 #DesignathonVietnam #LollypopVietnam #UIUX #terralogic
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lollypopvietnam · 1 year ago
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🍭 LOLLYPOP DESIGNATHON VIETNAM 2023 🏁
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8+ đội thi - 12 tiếng - 1 cơ hội VÀNG của cả năm
Designathon là một cuộc thi Hackathon kéo dài 12 tiếng, được Lollypop thiết kế riêng cho cộng đồng Dân thiết kế Việt Nam. Đến với Designathon để trải nghiệm một ngày trọn vẹn được:
✅ Học hỏi cùng chuyên gia UI/UX với 20+ năm kinh nghiệm
✅ Thiết kế giải pháp cho một vấn đề thực tiễn đầy hack não nhưng thú vị cùng anh em Designer nhiệt huyết, sáng tạo
✅ Ăn uống, nghỉ ngơi tại Studio của Lollypop
✅ Thể hiện bản thân, thuyết trình “bán” giải pháp trước Ban giám khảo đầy uy tín
Và tất nhiên, sau một ngày dài nỗ lực, cơ hội chiến thắng những phần thưởng hấp dẫn sẽ được trao cho những đội xứng đáng!
Designathon chắc chắn mang lại một sân chơi Uy tín - Chất lượng - Thú vị dành cho con dân “cầm Pen Tool, nảy giải pháp”.
➥Tìm hiểu chương trình và  Đăng ký ngay tại: https://lollypop.design/designathonvn-2023/ 
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🏷️ THÔNG TIN LOLLYPOP DESIGNATHON 2023:
↳ Thời gian: 9:00 - 21:00 ngày 23/09/2023
↳ Địa điểm: Lollypop Design Studio Vietnam - 1/12 Hoàng Việt, P.4, Q.Tân Bình, TP.HCM
↳ Đối tượng: Design Freshers/ Juniors có dưới 1 năm kinh nghiệm làm việc, hoặc Sinh viên các trường Đại học, Cao đẳng, Học viện, Trung tâm trên cả nước.
↳ Dự kiến đóng đơn: 23h59 ngày 8/09/2023 (hoặc sớm hơn khi đã đủ lượt đăng ký chất lượng)
🏷️ MỌI THẮC MẮC VUI LÒNG LIÊN HỆ:
✦ SĐT: 0933417879 (Ms. Thảo)
✦ Fanpage: https://www.facebook.com/lollypopvietnam 
#designathon2023 #designathon #designcompetition #designchallenge #lollypopvietnam #vietnamdesignathon #designcommunity #hackathon #designathonvietnam #designevent
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