The unified software development process
The unified software development process
The Inmates Are Running the Asylum
The Inmates Are Running the Asylum
Usability: Who Cares?: An Analysis of Indifference Towards Usability within the IT Industry
Proceedings of the IFIP 17th World Computer Congress - TC13 Stream on Usability: Gaining a Competitive Edge
Making a difference: a survey of the usability profession in Sweden
Proceedings of the third Nordic conference on Human-computer interaction
Management perspectives on usability in a public authority: a case study
Proceedings of the 4th Nordic conference on Human-computer interaction: changing roles
Usability professionals-current practices and future development
Interacting with Computers
The lonesome cowboy: A study of the usability designer role in systems development
Interacting with Computers
Physicality quantitative evaluation method
Proceedings of the 25th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference: Augmentation, Application, Innovation, Collaboration
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This keynote paper argues for an increased understanding of the various roles involved in the development work to be able to achieve the goal of developing increased usability. Human Computer Interaction (HCI) has for a long time been arguing for the sake of the users, but to be able to deliver methods, tools and processes that better fit the needs of developers we should study and understand development work to a larger extent. This paper discusses what HCI and software engineering contributes to each other's disciplines as well as what research contributes to practice. This also means an increased understanding of what research that counts in the academic context. Finally I argue that research should focus more on real problems of real development work, rather than on research that is easily publishable.