<a href="https://urbook.fordes.de/" rel="nofollow">https://urbook.fordes.de/</a><p>…a free/libré book about UX research with qualitative methods on motivations, activities written for UX researchers, UX designers and product managers.<p>I have been writing on this book since about 2010 and did a large rewrite during the first half of 2022. (I initally planned this with a bigger tech publisher).<p>This is the link to the full book for online reading: <a href="https://jdittrich.github.io/userNeedResearchBook/" rel="nofollow">https://jdittrich.github.io/userNeedResearchBook/</a> (it’s one long page, so it might take a bit to load)
Looks interesting. Awesome work putting this together!<p>I will bookmark and take a proper read when I can.<p>For the website - might be worth running it through a spell checker.<p>E.g found this pretty quickly “Early in the reserach session”
Do you write on a regular basis?<p>Is there a place to subscribe?<p>I'd definitely love to hear out your process of creating these.<p>P.S. I created a resource for remote-working parents. It's a weekly newsletter for now, but who knows, I might have enough value one day to do what you did here.<p><a href="https://thursdaydigest.com/" rel="nofollow">https://thursdaydigest.com/</a>
Why "libré" with a tilde?<p>The word for "free" in Spanish is "libre".<p>"Libré" is a past form of the verb "librar". It has many meanings but I guess the most common one is "to avoid".
After doing a Ctrl-F for "need" and not finding any distinction between needs and wants, I'm wondering if you understand what a human need is and if this book helps uncover actual needs versus things that aren't needs.