scholarly journals User Interface Analysis of Gapura Universitas Multimedia Nusantara Website

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 124-135
Author(s):  
Dara Shafira Zahra ◽  
Wella Wella ◽  
Aditya Satyagraha

The user interface (UI) of the Gapura site is proven to have various problems such as a poor visual hierarchy, UI that confuses its users, and UI that are considered unattractive by users. These things result in the poor feedback of its users. This study aims to examine the problems in the Gapura site by using the guidelines of the e-book published by UXPin, "Web UI Best Practice". The series of tests that will be conducted are blur test, scenario test, questionnaire and survey. After that, a prototype will be built according to the results of the tests with the aim of improving the UI Gapura site. The results of the prototypes made show that while there are still mistakes regarding the visual hierarchy of the prototype, the prototype was proven to be more usable by the users, and received better feedback than the Gapura site. Thus, it can be concluded that the changes applied in the prototype has made the UI of Gapura better.

VISUALITA ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 31-44
Author(s):  
Irma Rochmawati

IWEARUP.COM is a website that is an e-commerce based. It contains information about buying, selling, distributing, and marketing fashion products. A business website is an example of using design as a marketing tool. Display of charming website with design is an attraction. However, a good website design must be able to display information clearly. Especially how to make the interface possible as it is not confused with the information displayed. Poor interfaces affect the users productivity or experience in visiting a website. This is a visual hierarchy which is the most important principles behind every website design. With an instrumental case study of the approach to produce conclusions that can be applied in designing e-commerce-based website. The goal is to make the website design in line with the content that will increase the website design and increase knowledge about the visual hierarchy of web design and its relation to the user interface.


Author(s):  
Samantha A. Shave

This chapter sets out to develop an understanding of how social policies were disseminated between welfare officials. The first half demonstrates that, before the creation of the Poor Law Commission, there was no central welfare authority to suggest ways in which parishes could cope with the increasing demand on poor relief, resulting in parish officials seeking solutions from one another. The information they passed originated at a specific location, but it was presented and promoted as ‘best practice’. Knowledge was transferred between officials in a number of ways; they conducted correspondence, went on trips to workhouses and published, read and referred to pamphlets detailing workhouse practice. Locally derived knowledge was not insignificant after the passage of the Amendment Act. The Commission was proactive in seeking local precedents and encouraging Boards of Guardians to adopt particularly beneficial practices. In addition, regardless of the presence of a central welfare authority, evidence can be found of local officials continuing the tradition of conferring with one another, without the interference of the Commission. In short, the policy process was not constrained by parish boundaries before 1834, nor controlled by the Commission thereafter.


2019 ◽  
pp. 178-192
Author(s):  
Sijbren Cnossen

Chapter 12 examines the VAT treatment of immovable property in Africa. In most African countries, housing services—in the form of rents and rental values of owner-occupied property—comprise a sizable part of consumption expenditures. Clearly, housing is too large a sector to ignore in the design and operation of a broad-based, properly functioning VAT. Since residential housing is often an income-elastic item of consumption, exemption of this sector would be regressive with respect to income; in other words, the rich would benefit more than the poor. The chapter starts by setting out how immovable property should be taxed under a pure and a best-practice VAT. This is followed by a review of the actual treatment of immovable property in Africa, including the VAT’s interaction with transfer taxes and stamp duties. Possible directions for reform are considered, before a recapitulation of policy proposals concludes.


2009 ◽  
Vol 40 (12) ◽  
pp. 1212-1222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor M.R. Penichet ◽  
Maria D. Lozano ◽  
José A. Gallud ◽  
Ricardo Tesoriero

Author(s):  
Stefania De Gregorio

<p>The old age and the poor state of repair of the Italian building heritage and the change in the needs and lifestyle of modern society require re-qualitative interventions of building rehabilitation. These operations are environmentally sustainable, favouring the protection of the soil, allowing the grey energy of the materials that make up the building to be depreciated over a greater number of years and which will have sufficient residual performance, also thanks to integration with other components.</p><p>In order to safeguard the intrinsic sustainability of the rehabilitation of the building, it is necessary to act in the intervention taking into account its sustainability, considering the life cycle of both the building as a whole together with its specific redevelopment project. Sustainability in the management phase is conditioned by energy efficiency; in the construction and demolition phases, however, it is conditioned both by the construction techniques and the connection methods between the different elements of the construction system, and above all by the choice of its components and materials that make it up. The paper presents as an international best practice a dry construction system made with recycled elements derived from scaffolding and a wet construction system consisting of components in lime and hemp.</p>


The principle objective of this project is to analyse and design a multi-storied building [g + 10 (3 dimensional frame)] using staad-pro for different cases like normal building seismic resist building and steel frame building. The design involves load calculations and analysing the whole structure by staad.pro. Staad.pro features a state-of-the-art user interface, analysis and design to visualization and result verification, staad.pro is the professional’s choice. Initially we started with the analysis of simple 2 dimensional frames and manually checked the accuracy of the software with our results. The results proved to be very accurate.


1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A. Malek ◽  
Bryan E. Brett ◽  
Edward A. Martin ◽  
David G. Hoagland

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