UX London 2024 closing keynotes

Alright, so last week I gave you the low-down on each day of this year’s UX London:

  1. Tuesday, June 18th focuses on UX research,
  2. Wednesday, June 19th focuses on product design, and
  3. Thursday, June 20th focuses on design ops and design systems

But the line-up for each day wasn’t quite complete. There was a mystery slot at the end of each day for a closing keynote.

Well, I’m very happy to unveil the trio of fantastic speakers who will be closing out each day…

A suave dapper man with brown eyes, a close-cropped dark beard and punky hair in a stylish light blue suit against a white background. A middle-aged white man on stage with a microphone gesticulating as he stares into the future. A young white woman with dark hair smiling in front of a grey backdrop.

Rama Gheerawo is the closing speaker on day one. Rama will show you how to frame inclusive design in the context of UX.

I’ve been trying to get Rama for UX London for the past few years but the timings never worked out. I’m absolutely delighted that I’ve finally managed to nab him! His talk is guaranteed to be the perfect inspirational ending for day one.

Matt Webb is giving the closing keynote on day two. Matt will show what it’s like to live and work with AI. You know my scepticism on this topic but even I have to hand it to Matt; he’s finding ways to use these tools to create true delight.

Honestly it feels like a bit of a cheat getting Matt to wrap up the day—his talks are always incredibly entertaining so I feel like I’m taking the easy route. If you’ve seen his appearances at dConstruct you’ll know what I mean.

Maggie Appleton is the final speaker on the final day of UX London. Maggie will show you how to explore designing with large language models. Again, even a sceptic like me has a lot to learn from Maggie’s level-headed humanistic approach to AI.

I’m so happy to have Maggie speaking at UX London. Not only am I a huge fan of her website, but I also love her presentation style. She’s going to entertain and educate in equal measure, and she’s certain to leave us with some fascinating questions to ponder.

With that, the line-up for UX London 2024 is complete …and what a stellar line-up it is!

Grab your ticket if you haven’t already, either for the full full three days or if you can’t manage that, day tickets are available too.

Use this discount code to 20% of the ticket price: JOINJEREMY. I’d love to see you there!

Have you published a response to this? :

Responses

weywalker

@adactio Maggie Appleton’s website is indeed rather good…but it doesn’t work without enabling JavaScript.

# Posted by weywalker on Thursday, May 2nd, 2024 at 11:27am

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Previously on this day

6 years ago I wrote Frameworking

Weighing up the pros and cons of using a JavaScript framework.

7 years ago I wrote Thanos

Avengers are wizards; Thanos is a prophet.

7 years ago I wrote Service worker resources

Hyperlinks to help you get your site working offline.

8 years ago I wrote Styling the Patterns Day site

A few days in Gridlandia.

10 years ago I wrote 100 words 041

Day forty one.

12 years ago I wrote dConstruct 2013

Put the date in your calendar.

13 years ago I wrote Questions for Mobilism

I’m going to be moderating two panel discussions. What should I ask the panelists?

14 years ago I wrote Jared Spool: The Secret Lives of Links

Liveblogging Jared’s talk at An Event Apart in Boston.

14 years ago I wrote Ethan Marcotte: The Responsive Designer’s Workflow

Liveblogging Ethan’s talk at An Event Apart in Boston.

14 years ago I wrote Luke Wroblewski: Mobile Web Design Moves

Liveblogging Luke’s talk at An Event Apart in Boston.

14 years ago I wrote Veerle Pieters: The Experimental Zone

Liveblogging Veerle’s talk at An Event Apart in Boston.

14 years ago I wrote Whitney Hess: Design Principles — The Philosophy of UX

Liveblogging Whitney’s presentation at An Event Apart in Boston.

14 years ago I wrote Jeffrey Zeldman: What Every Web Designer Should Know — A Better You At What You Do

Liveblogging Jeffrey’s opening talk at An Event Apart in Boston.

15 years ago I wrote Understanding

Read what Ben Ward has written.

20 years ago I wrote Weekend in Seattle

Seattle is my kind of town. Whenever I’m here visiting, I always find myself thinking about what it would be like to live here. I think I could get used to the lifestyle.

21 years ago I wrote Now with even fewer wires

Brighton has some new wireless hotspots thanks to the good folks at Loose Connection.

22 years ago I wrote Leopold Kraus

Jessica came across the website of a surf-rock band that I used to play with when we were both still living in Freiburg, Germany.

23 years ago I wrote No Macs need apply

Jessica and I have thinking about getting some of our stuff insured (the computers, musical intruments, etc.). Jessica spent some time today comparing insurance policies online.