2016 Death of the Home Screen

Alexander Meinhardt
Alexander MeinhardtExperience Design, Creative Strategy, UX Consulting em Krunchtime
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
K R U N C H T I M E
I NT E RACT IV E
„D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
THE HOME SCREEN IS LOSING TRAFFIC.
Mat Honan, WIRED
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Death of the home screen
Historically, home screen real estate has been fiercely
contested. Apps and folders have battled it out for
home screen prominence, elbowing each other out of
the way for stronger footing and visibility.
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Death of the home screen
Now the experience of our primary mobile screen
being a bank of app icons that lead to independent
destinations is dying. And that changes what we need
to design and build.
Death of the home screen
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Recap: Apps
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Recap: Apps
Apps proved a focused experience beats a broad one
on a small screen. But as they’ve proliferated,
navigating to them individually to perform simple
tasks has become cruelly inefficient.
„D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E NAPPS CHANGED EVERYTHING
BY COUNTERING
THE MESSINESS OF THE WEB.
Mat Honan, WIRED
„D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
MOBILE USE HAS EVOLVED,
BUT THE HOME SCREEN HASN’T.
Roxanne Abercrombie, Parker Software
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Recap: Apps
The idea of having a screen full of icons, representing
independent apps, that need to be opened to
experience them, is making less and less sense.
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Recap: Apps
It’s very likely that the primary interface for
interacting with apps will not be the app itself.
The app will be primarily a publishing tool.
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Recap: Apps
This new paradigm matches much more closely with
how real life works. We don’t live our lives in silos, like
the app silos that exist today. People start to forget
about “apps” and just think about businesses and
products and services.
E P I C O R C H A P T E RStill, apps won’t go away …
• Opening apps is still necessary and great for many contexts,
especially creation of new content and dedicated deep
workflows, and maybe changing preferences.
As large screens won’t go away …
• For focusing on deep analysis, creation and consumption, we
will always have large high resolution screens. The future isn’t
just screens in our pockets, it’s many screens of all shapes and
sizes.
Recap: Apps
„D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
IT’S THE END OF APPS
AS WE KNOW THEM.
Paul Adams, VP of Product, Intercom
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Still, apps won’t go away …
• Opening apps is still necessary and great for many contexts,
especially creation of new content and dedicated deep
workflows, and maybe changing preferences.
As large screens won’t go away …
• For focusing on deep analysis, creation and consumption, we
will always have large high resolution screens. The future isn’t
just screens in our pockets, it’s many screens of all shapes and
sizes.
The end of apps as we know them
The end of apps as we know them
„D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
WE’RE NOW ENTERING THE AGE OF
APPS AS SERVICE LAYERS.
Matthew Panzarino‚ Techcrunch
Trend: Rich notifications
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Interactive notifications
For a while now, you can take action directly in
notifications, eg. ‚Quick Replies‘.
Up next notification cards will enable full product
experiences and independent workflows right inside
the card.
Auto Shazam
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Auto Shazam
Ideas
> Retweet
> Swap player
> Share story
> 5 min late!
> Friend’s favorite
to own playlist
> Check-in
> Buy item
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Lifeline
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
3D Touch
Interactive notifications with 3D Touch:
Once you receive a notification, tap and hold on the
message to activate 3D Touch. Depending on what
type of app you receive notification from, the dialog
box prompts vary. Once you have replied to the
message, tap anywhere on the screen to go back.
3D Touch
3D Touch
Trend: Embedded apps
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Embedded apps
Imagine that a parent card can support a child card.
That means you don’t need to install the app to
experience the content from the child card.
Twitter & Square
WeChat
WeChat Pay
Trend: Instant Apps
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Instant Apps
Get the full Android app experience from links that
would otherwise open your mobile web page — like
search, social media, messaging, and other deep links
— without the need to install the app first.
Instant Apps
Trend: Widgets
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Widgets
Today widgets essentially offer a window into larger
apps. Developers can display pretty much anything in
their widget, and users can perform simple actions
like checking into a venue or swiping through
headlines.
Soccer Widget
Philips Hue Widget
Philips Hue Widget
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Apple Watch
The Apple Watch already works like this. On the wrist,
notifications and messaging shortcuts take precedent
over the bubbly home screen of apps.
Apple Watch „Complications“
Apple Watch „Complications“
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Apple Watch
Apple Watch offers quick and seamless
communication methods, and one of the most used
features for many users is the ability to instantly reply
to inbound messages with quick pre-canned replies,
emojis, or a dictated message. You can even
customize these.
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Apple Watch
Responding to text messages on Apple Watch gets a
lot easier with watchOS 3, thanks to a new feature
that lets you scribble letters instead of just using
canned replies. It gives wearers the ability to say
whatever they want without depending on Siri.
Apple Watch „Replies“
http://www.apple.com/watchos/
Trend: Search As Navigation
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Search As Navigation
Apps can be indexed by the operating system.
Soon, search will be the easiest way to do all things on
your phone. Not just to access apps but to actually
use them.
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Yesterday …
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Yesterday …
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Today …
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Today …
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Today …
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Today …
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Today …
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Today …
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Search As Navigation
Soon, search will be the easiest way to do all things on
your phone. Not just to access apps but to actually
use them.
Trend: Context-specific suggestions
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Context-specific suggestions
iOS 10 can suggest apps you might like to use based
on your location and the time of day.
When you arrive at the gym, for example, iOS may
suggest your favorite personal-training app to help
you get the most out of your workout.
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Siri Suggestions
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Siri Suggestions
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Siri Suggestions
Swarm
Trend: Messengers
Google Allo
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
iMessages vs Dropbox
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
iMessages vs Dropbox
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
iMessages vs Dropbox
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
iMessages vs Dropbox
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
iMessages vs Dropbox
Trend: Personal Assistants
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Voice Input
Still an emerging trend, but a huge one. Voice input
will gain new powers, like the ability to “deep link”
reminders and messages to specific packets of
content inside other apps.
Google Now Assistant
Google Assistant
Google Assistant
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Google Assistant
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
What does it mean for UX?
„D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
RESPONSIVE DESIGN IS A NICE THING, BUT
WE’RE HEADING WAY BEYOND THAT.
Paul Adams, VP of Product @Intercom
„D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
TOWARDS
APPS AS SERVICES.
Paul Adams, VP of Product @Intercom
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
What does it mean for UX?
Designing systems not destinations
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
What does it mean for UX?
Designing systems not destination a publishing system
as well as a destination
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
For most of the stuff you do on your phone every day,
you can expect to see functionality extracted and
repackaged and sprinkled throughout your phone’s
interface.
What does it mean for UX?
A publishing system as well as a destination
Notifications
Widgets
Watch
Search / Voice
Suggestions
3D Touch
Instant App
Google Assistant
App
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
Content needs to be broken down into atomic units so
that it can work agnostic of the screen size or
technology platform. Containers for content that can
come from any app.
What does it mean for UX?
Facebook’s eco-system of objects
App
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
The primary design pattern here is cards. Designing
these, and the actions within them, will become an
increasingly important part of product design. We will
need to spend as much of our time on this aspect of
the experience, as on the experiences within the app.
What does it mean for UX?
Cards
What does it mean for UX?
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
What does it mean for businesses?
D E A T H O F T H E
H O M E S C R E E N
What does it mean for businesses?
For businesses, it also starts to solve the app discoverability
problem. Rather than relying on App Store promotion,
advertising, or new deep in app linking to get discovered, an
apps content can appear as a card in our stream, particularly
when embedded in a parent card. Indeed there may not be a
child app, the content and actions in that child card may come
from the web.
What does it mean for businesses?
What does it mean for businesses?
D E A T H O F
T H E
H O M E
S C R E E N
As people interact or don’t interact with cards presented to them, the system will learn
when to show more or less from a specific source (app). As content from different apps
will be presented side by side, this changes who you might think you are competing with.
Competition is between products that do the same job, not products that are in the
same category. This is already the case today; when faced with multiple notifications on
a phone screen, they all compete with each other for your attention. Twitter for example,
may be competing much more with entertainment apps e.g. Games and News, than with
other social products.
This intense competition means businesses will have to spend time designing great
notifications/cards, because they will potentially be competing with cards from
Facebook, or Amazon, or Google.
New competitors
Alexander Meinhardt
krunchtime.org
KRUNCHTI M E I NTE RACTIVE
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2016 Death of the Home Screen

  • 1. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N K R U N C H T I M E I NT E RACT IV E
  • 2. „D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N THE HOME SCREEN IS LOSING TRAFFIC. Mat Honan, WIRED
  • 3. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Death of the home screen Historically, home screen real estate has been fiercely contested. Apps and folders have battled it out for home screen prominence, elbowing each other out of the way for stronger footing and visibility.
  • 4. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Death of the home screen Now the experience of our primary mobile screen being a bank of app icons that lead to independent destinations is dying. And that changes what we need to design and build.
  • 5. Death of the home screen
  • 6. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Recap: Apps
  • 7. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Recap: Apps Apps proved a focused experience beats a broad one on a small screen. But as they’ve proliferated, navigating to them individually to perform simple tasks has become cruelly inefficient.
  • 8. „D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E NAPPS CHANGED EVERYTHING BY COUNTERING THE MESSINESS OF THE WEB. Mat Honan, WIRED
  • 9. „D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N MOBILE USE HAS EVOLVED, BUT THE HOME SCREEN HASN’T. Roxanne Abercrombie, Parker Software
  • 10. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Recap: Apps The idea of having a screen full of icons, representing independent apps, that need to be opened to experience them, is making less and less sense.
  • 11. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Recap: Apps It’s very likely that the primary interface for interacting with apps will not be the app itself. The app will be primarily a publishing tool.
  • 12. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Recap: Apps This new paradigm matches much more closely with how real life works. We don’t live our lives in silos, like the app silos that exist today. People start to forget about “apps” and just think about businesses and products and services.
  • 13. E P I C O R C H A P T E RStill, apps won’t go away … • Opening apps is still necessary and great for many contexts, especially creation of new content and dedicated deep workflows, and maybe changing preferences. As large screens won’t go away … • For focusing on deep analysis, creation and consumption, we will always have large high resolution screens. The future isn’t just screens in our pockets, it’s many screens of all shapes and sizes. Recap: Apps
  • 14. „D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N IT’S THE END OF APPS AS WE KNOW THEM. Paul Adams, VP of Product, Intercom
  • 15. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Still, apps won’t go away … • Opening apps is still necessary and great for many contexts, especially creation of new content and dedicated deep workflows, and maybe changing preferences. As large screens won’t go away … • For focusing on deep analysis, creation and consumption, we will always have large high resolution screens. The future isn’t just screens in our pockets, it’s many screens of all shapes and sizes. The end of apps as we know them
  • 16. The end of apps as we know them
  • 17. „D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N WE’RE NOW ENTERING THE AGE OF APPS AS SERVICE LAYERS. Matthew Panzarino‚ Techcrunch
  • 19. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Interactive notifications For a while now, you can take action directly in notifications, eg. ‚Quick Replies‘. Up next notification cards will enable full product experiences and independent workflows right inside the card.
  • 21. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Auto Shazam
  • 22. Ideas > Retweet > Swap player > Share story > 5 min late! > Friend’s favorite to own playlist > Check-in > Buy item
  • 23. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Lifeline
  • 24. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N 3D Touch Interactive notifications with 3D Touch: Once you receive a notification, tap and hold on the message to activate 3D Touch. Depending on what type of app you receive notification from, the dialog box prompts vary. Once you have replied to the message, tap anywhere on the screen to go back.
  • 28. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Embedded apps Imagine that a parent card can support a child card. That means you don’t need to install the app to experience the content from the child card.
  • 33. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Instant Apps Get the full Android app experience from links that would otherwise open your mobile web page — like search, social media, messaging, and other deep links — without the need to install the app first.
  • 36. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Widgets Today widgets essentially offer a window into larger apps. Developers can display pretty much anything in their widget, and users can perform simple actions like checking into a venue or swiping through headlines.
  • 40. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Apple Watch The Apple Watch already works like this. On the wrist, notifications and messaging shortcuts take precedent over the bubbly home screen of apps.
  • 43. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Apple Watch Apple Watch offers quick and seamless communication methods, and one of the most used features for many users is the ability to instantly reply to inbound messages with quick pre-canned replies, emojis, or a dictated message. You can even customize these.
  • 44. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Apple Watch Responding to text messages on Apple Watch gets a lot easier with watchOS 3, thanks to a new feature that lets you scribble letters instead of just using canned replies. It gives wearers the ability to say whatever they want without depending on Siri.
  • 46. Trend: Search As Navigation
  • 47. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Search As Navigation Apps can be indexed by the operating system. Soon, search will be the easiest way to do all things on your phone. Not just to access apps but to actually use them.
  • 48. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Yesterday …
  • 49. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Yesterday …
  • 50. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Today …
  • 51. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Today …
  • 52. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Today …
  • 53. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Today …
  • 54. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Today …
  • 55. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Today …
  • 56. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Search As Navigation Soon, search will be the easiest way to do all things on your phone. Not just to access apps but to actually use them.
  • 58. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Context-specific suggestions iOS 10 can suggest apps you might like to use based on your location and the time of day. When you arrive at the gym, for example, iOS may suggest your favorite personal-training app to help you get the most out of your workout.
  • 59. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Siri Suggestions
  • 60. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Siri Suggestions
  • 61. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Siri Suggestions
  • 62. Swarm
  • 65. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N iMessages vs Dropbox
  • 66. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N iMessages vs Dropbox
  • 67. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N iMessages vs Dropbox
  • 68. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N iMessages vs Dropbox
  • 69. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N iMessages vs Dropbox
  • 71. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Voice Input Still an emerging trend, but a huge one. Voice input will gain new powers, like the ability to “deep link” reminders and messages to specific packets of content inside other apps.
  • 75. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Google Assistant
  • 76. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N What does it mean for UX?
  • 77. „D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N RESPONSIVE DESIGN IS A NICE THING, BUT WE’RE HEADING WAY BEYOND THAT. Paul Adams, VP of Product @Intercom
  • 78. „D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N TOWARDS APPS AS SERVICES. Paul Adams, VP of Product @Intercom
  • 79. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N What does it mean for UX? Designing systems not destinations
  • 80. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N What does it mean for UX? Designing systems not destination a publishing system as well as a destination
  • 81. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N For most of the stuff you do on your phone every day, you can expect to see functionality extracted and repackaged and sprinkled throughout your phone’s interface. What does it mean for UX?
  • 82. A publishing system as well as a destination Notifications Widgets Watch Search / Voice Suggestions 3D Touch Instant App Google Assistant App
  • 83. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N Content needs to be broken down into atomic units so that it can work agnostic of the screen size or technology platform. Containers for content that can come from any app. What does it mean for UX?
  • 85. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N The primary design pattern here is cards. Designing these, and the actions within them, will become an increasingly important part of product design. We will need to spend as much of our time on this aspect of the experience, as on the experiences within the app. What does it mean for UX?
  • 86. Cards
  • 87. What does it mean for UX?
  • 88. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N What does it mean for businesses?
  • 89. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N What does it mean for businesses? For businesses, it also starts to solve the app discoverability problem. Rather than relying on App Store promotion, advertising, or new deep in app linking to get discovered, an apps content can appear as a card in our stream, particularly when embedded in a parent card. Indeed there may not be a child app, the content and actions in that child card may come from the web.
  • 90. What does it mean for businesses?
  • 91. What does it mean for businesses?
  • 92. D E A T H O F T H E H O M E S C R E E N As people interact or don’t interact with cards presented to them, the system will learn when to show more or less from a specific source (app). As content from different apps will be presented side by side, this changes who you might think you are competing with. Competition is between products that do the same job, not products that are in the same category. This is already the case today; when faced with multiple notifications on a phone screen, they all compete with each other for your attention. Twitter for example, may be competing much more with entertainment apps e.g. Games and News, than with other social products. This intense competition means businesses will have to spend time designing great notifications/cards, because they will potentially be competing with cards from Facebook, or Amazon, or Google. New competitors