Skip to main content

BlackPepper delivers seamless user experience for Resonate platform

UK-based BlackPepper Software (BlackPepper) has deployed one of its experts to assist Resonate’s in-house team in developing a framework for user experience (UX) consistency for its Luminate digital platform. The solution is designed with the intention meeting the demands of emerging global trends in transport. Luminate is said to provide users with competitive advantages by creating the foundation for a suite of progressive products to meet the demands of machine learning, connected devices, cloud
March 29, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

UK-based BlackPepper Software (BlackPepper) has deployed one of its experts to assist Resonate’s in-house team in developing a framework for user experience (UX) consistency for its Luminate digital platform. The solution is designed with the intention meeting the demands of emerging global trends in transport.

Luminate is said to provide users with competitive advantages by creating the foundation for a suite of progressive products to meet the demands of machine learning, connected devices, cloud storage, social media mining and advanced security provision.

The UX consultant assisted Resonate’s management team in determining how the user journey should look and how to best incorporate a simple UX across the entire business that is in line with the company’s brand guidelines.

BlackPepper then defined and built a user interface pattern library, which included a start-up guide for the product and a library of components. The template designs could be used by Resonate’s in-house teams of developers to facilitate a recognisable look and feel across the whole solution.

Additionally, BlackPepper delivered training to a team of UX designers and advised on how best to find and build further in-house expertise going forward.

Rowan Welch, account director at BlackPepper, said: “This was an exciting but challenging brief, involving a system that is crucial for UK transport infrastructure and some pressurised timelines.”

“We’re delighted, therefore, to have left Resonate with not only a solution to an immediate problem, but the skills, knowledge and tool set to allow them to move forward independently.”

Related Content

  • Speed reduction measures - carrot or stick?
    January 23, 2012
    In Sweden, marketing company DDB Stockholm employed a mock speed camera as part of a promotional campaign for automotive manufacturer Volkswagen. The result was worldwide online interest and promotion of the debate over excessive speed to the national level. A developing trend in traffic management policy is to look at how to induce road users to modify their behaviour by incentivising change rather than forcing it through the application of penalties. There have been several studies conducted into this; an
  • Clearview’s Insight delivers data management
    June 16, 2015
    Clearview Traffic’s Insight ITS data management platform is the result of its designers focusing on creating a suite of powerful but simple tools for data management and data sharing, with the ability to access data on demand. Designed to provide flexibility to power users whilst maximising ease of use for general users, Insight’s versatility and simplicity enables users to manage devices, collect data and provide quality control through to rich graphical dashboard analysis.
  • Outsourcing security weakness for Sweden’s driver and vehicle data
    October 24, 2017
    The security of driver and vehicle data hit the headlines this summer in Sweden and its authorities are still dealing with the fallout. David Crawford reports. epercussions from Sweden’s vehicle data outsourcing scandal continue to reverberate. Transportstyrelsen, the government’s transport agency, came under fire this summer for risking the personal security of over five million motorists by failing to implement full security checks on personnel in other countries to whom individual work packages could
  • Machine vision standards definition moves forward with establishment of new forum
    December 3, 2012
    The new Future Standards Forum will homogenise standards develop in the machine vision and partnering sectors. Here, machine vision industry experts discuss developments. By Jason Barnes At the Vision Show, which took place in Stuttgart at the beginning of November, the European Machine Vision Association, the US’s Automated Imaging Association and the Japan Industrial Imaging Association (JIIA) established a joint initiative, the Future Standards Forum (FSF). This, said the EMVA’s President Toni Ventura, a