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Im not sure if this will make sense but here goes:
Both can be prefaced with many words. Software Design, UI Design, UX Design, Home Design...
Architecture is the What. Solution will use a server-less design, with a SPA front end, on amazon, with language X, database Q. Requirement Y will be satisfied with solution M and requirement U with solutions N and B.
Design is the how.
And because the architect spins more words, gets paid more.
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My son just got his Master's Degree in UX Design (and a new job doing this). He insists it's different to UI design but all I can tell is that the spelling of the acronym/name is one letter different.
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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UX (User Experience) and UI (User Interface) really are two sides of the same coin. UI design is all about design that fits the function of the program. UX is how the user feels about the interaction with the interface. You can have a great design, for instance, but the user experience will fall flat due to issues with performance or in the consistency of the interface.
A good example is with operating systems and file browse/open/save dialogs. If an OS uses a cohesive strategy, then application developers use the same toolbox to access dialog interfaces, which makes the user experience (at the very least) predictable from one application to another. Without this consistency, every application has its own dialogs, which makes the experience from one application to another jarring.
Also, user experience is about knowing your target audience, and then fine tuning the interface for that audience. For instance, if most of your audience is hard-core programmers, they won't be scared off by CLI commands to perform everyday functions. But if your target audience isn't technically oriented, presenting them with a CLI will only push them to the next product in line.
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Software architecture is that which cannot be easily replaced.
Everything else is implementation details
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I am a long time hobbyist programmer from a construction based industry. Being a hobbyist, I am no authority on the matter, but I think my intimate relationship with both of those words in and out of the programming world might provide some decent perspective. I find it remarkable just how often I can take programming philosophy articles, do a search/replace of programming terms for construction terms and usually wind up with a document that 95% represents my very divergent industry.
To me design is the aesthetic parts of a software that users will see and appreciate. That isn't necessarily just the appeal of the UI, but also related to the combination of tools (features) that were made available for them to productively accomplish their own goals. In construction terms, design is most fundamentally how appreciated the end results will be to the occupants, after the incorporation of all the tiny details.
I would consider architecture the elegance of the whole systems back end that supports the design. Was it a series of after thoughts and band aids that ultimately produced a seamless user experience or was it well planned, easy to maintain, easy to enhance and easy to troubleshoot. I would also say, in terms of construction, the architecture would include the very big picture pre-engineering concepts and that truly good architecture should always be clear and obvious to maintenance personnel of reasonable competency.
Both are very important and extremely interconnected. Which is why this question will never have a consensus.
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Well played, folks - good game.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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They certainly outclassed England, sad to say.
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nicely done.
always seems a little more satisfying when the favorites don't always prevail.
Message Signature
(Click to edit ->)
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I think SA were certainly favourites today.
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It was a good game, I saw a recent article reflecting how the British press were talking about their players and I think that's totally unfair.
As a Saffer I'm proud of our boys but England did well, it was a good final. Have to say though that the tries were pure magic.
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Just when I need to print an important international contract my laser printers toner cartridge is empty
Grrrrrrr ...
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I used my inkjet, and even though the it said "ink low", I got both pages printed - and scanned.
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That must be one of those "monster tank" things
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Flog the printer on FleaBay and buy a new one ...
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Then go all traditional: Use a quilt and parchment to write it up, roll it up in a scroll snd put a wax seal on it. Then have it delivered by a messenger on horseback, or even better, send an entire squadron of the Zeeland Dragoons in 18. century uniforms to deliver it.
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats.
His last invention was an evil Lasagna. It didn't kill anyone, and it actually tasted pretty good.
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open the printer, remove the toner cartridges and shake them a little...
A last resort option in case you can't get new ones soon.
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Why didn't I think of that myself
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You can usually get a quite a few more prints by shaking a laser cartridge.
“That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
― Christopher Hitchens
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Shaken, but not stirred
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It spontaneously stopped being able to print anything with no prior warning?
Mine's been warning me for about 2 years now. Pages are no longer as dark as they used to be, but still perfectly usable. At this rate I'm probably good for another year before I have to look into a replacement cartridge.
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No, in the Samsung SL-C460W panel I could see that the black toner cartridge was almost empty.
Being a Dutch cheapskate however I refused to order new cartridges. we did manage with the original cartridges (known to not be filled completely) for 6 years btw.
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RickZeeland wrote: Being a Dutch cheapskate
I think I've found the problem.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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