2. PASSENGER
About the Product:
!
Chauffeur is a mobile application catered primarily towards both the first-time
user of public transportation and those who would like to rest on much longer
trips. Chauffeur is intended for use with Bay Area public transportation and
unlike other applications of this kind, Chauffeur provides information and
notifications on how far you are from your destination.
!
About the Project:
!
Chauffeur is a student project designed with the constraint of working as a
mobile application. It utilizes the open sourced information from BART and
SFMTA.
7. PASSENGER
Research
Personas
!
Information!
Darren is from Sacramento and just move to San Francisco to attend
GA’s WDi program. He has never taken BART until very recently.
During his first trip, he was extremely anxious and was constantly
unsure of where he was and how much longer he had left on the
train. During longer trips between stations, he found himself
wondering if he had actually missed his stop.
!
Tech Knowledge!
Darren is 25 and constantly on either his phone, his PC, or his laptop.
He is very knowledgable of the technology of today and can easily
navigate most applications and websites. He often uses his custombuilt computer primarily to code and play computer games.
8. PASSENGER
Research
Personas
!
Information!
Justin is also from Sacramento, yet has worked the finance industry
in San Francisco for a few years now. He commutes from
Sacramento to San Francisco every day with a mixture of
automobiles and BART. He Frequently finds himself exhausted at the
end of every day and would prefer to be able to rest on the train
without fears of missing his stop.
!
Tech Knowledge!
Justin is 25 and uses his phone for work and a little bit of social
media. He also has a strong knowledge of computers and
technology and uses only high-end computers for his gaming habits.
9. PASSENGER
Research
Scenarios
!
Ideated and created different
scenarios depending the user. This is
the scenario more fitted towards the
heavy commuter. But can also be
used for beginning public
transportation users.
!
Opportunities!
Know which bus/train to take.
!
Be able to specify where you’re going.
!
Use some kind of alert or alarm system
to know where to get off.
!
11. PASSENGER
Design
Flows and paper-prototypes
!
Method!
Sketched out different frames to find how information should
be presented and laid out. Did personal run-throughs to see
how the user would navigate through the application.
!
Findings
Some maps, especially the standard BART one, is unclear
as it doesn’t provide a good scale for distance.
!
A lot of drop down menus caused both aesthetic and
navigational issues.
!
Certain pieces of information seemed useless on its own.
Parts of information should compliment each other, not fight
for dominance.
12. PASSENGER
Design
Iteration
!
Method!
Wireframed and prototyped the
application to find problems with the
design and presentation.
!
Findings!
Some pages had an information
overload.
!
Some parts were hard to see.
!
The lay-out could utilize space a lot
better to reduce clutter, while still
presenting the same (or more)
information.
13. PASSENGER
Design
Prototype Testing
!
Method!
Tested my final prototype on three separate
subjects to test flow, user-friendliness, and
the first-run experience.
!
Tasks!
Decide on a start and stop location.
!
Find a train to take.
!
“Ride” train to final stop.
!
Locate how to adjust notifications.
!
Findings!
The needed information to know when to get
off was there.
!
The application was easy to navigate.