The most widely-deployed and evidence-based platform for enabling Frontline Workers, CommCare empowers organizations to build their own digital solutions to better deliver services, manage clients, and collect data. Built from the ground up to support the complexities and idiosyncrasies of frontline work, CommCare can meet nearly every frontline use case in any setting (including offline) at any scale, from pilot to nationwide programs. CommCare's unique value is its proven ability to deliver technology which is both highly impactful and highly scalable. More than one million Frontline Workers have used CommCare applications to deliver critical frontline services across numerous sectors, including health, agriculture, social services & more. CommCare is backed by the strongest evidence base of any digital platform for Frontline Workers, proving CommCare’s positive impact on organizational performance, frontline workers behaviors, and most importantly, client outcomes. CommCare’s technology grows with an organization’s needs. Users can rapidly launch production ready no-code applications in minutes, with confidence that their tools can be integrated into complex, at-scale ecosystems. Dimagi’s expert team delivers CommCare on an open source, professionally managed foundation which is best in its class for sustainability and top-tier security that meets rigorous standards including GDPR, HIPAA, and SOC-2.
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Based on our record, Laws of UX seems to be a lot more popular than CommCare. While we know about 49 links to Laws of UX, we've tracked only 1 mention of CommCare. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Look at the Laws of UX https://lawsofux.com/en/ , its great information for what you trying to do. Source: almost 2 years ago
Similar to Growth's psychology section, here's another great set of principles to learn and keep in your back pocket: Https://lawsofux.com/en/. Source: almost 2 years ago
Have a look through Laws of UX. Although I couldn’t find one for your situation quickly scanning the list, it’s a good resource for when you need to derive decisions from principles/“laws”. Source: almost 2 years ago
With UIDs, I find them to be primarily aesthically minded - they have some knowledge of the laws of UX a lot of the time by accident through the virtue of applying design best practice, they usually display strong brand awareness, understand the importance of cohesive visual design across the whole platform but are equally comfortable deep diving into the low level detail and know the technical limitations of the... Source: almost 2 years ago
Study Basic Knowledge: Laws of UX, Usability Heuristics. Source: almost 2 years ago
These are mainly used for collecting research data, however their flexibility could make them useful for your need. Redcap (https://projectredcap.org/about/) you can design a complex form, has a mobile app KoboToolbox - the we form builder can handle complex forms, has a mobile app CommCare (https://dimagi.com/commcare/) a you can design and track cases over a long processes. Source: over 1 year ago
Design Principles - An open source repository of design principles and methods
SurveyCTO - Collect data you can trust Offline or online, in the field, on the street, or in the lab.
Product Disrupt - A design student's list of resources to learn Product Design
DHIS2 - Manage aggregate data with a flexible data model which has been field-tested for more than 15 years.
Checklist Design - The best UI and UX practices for production ready design.
Ona - Mobile Data Collection solution and application that empowers field teams. Ona provides a web and mobile app that allows the monitoring of real time field data both online and offline.