MMF
Minimum Marketable Feature (MMF) is the smallest set of functionality that delivers significant value to users and can be marketed effectively.
Minimum Marketable Feature (MMF) is the smallest set of functionality that delivers significant value to users and can be marketed effectively.
A research approach that starts with observations and develops broader generalizations or theories from them.
Common reading patterns users follow when scanning web content, such as the F-pattern, where users read across the top and then scan down the left side.
A set of principles describing how the human mind organizes visual information into meaningful wholes.
A theory that explains how the amount of mental effort required to process information can impact user experience and task performance.
A cognitive bias where individuals believe that past random events affect the probabilities of future random events.
Replacing one UI component with another, often used in adaptive or dynamic interfaces.
Model-View-Controller (MVC) is an architectural pattern that separates an application into three main logical components: the Model (data), the View (user interface), and the Controller (processes that handle input).
A principle stating that as the flexibility of a system increases, its usability often decreases, and vice versa.