we are surrounded by computers and applications that constantly require our attention: smartphones, tablets, laptops and smart-​TVs competing for brief moments of our time to notify us about an event or to request our action.
modern advances in software and hardware sensing, paired with Artificial Intelligence (AI), which continue to transform the way we interact with our computing devices.
She has provided you with a “no-UI” experience: proactively initiating conversation about your goals, limiting interaction to a few natural questions and responses, factoring in a large number of observations and assumptions and presenting you with the results of hard and intensive computation
As a designer, you can leverage information provided via hardware sensors, data repositories internal or external to a device,
time of the day via the clock. Don’t ask the user for information unless you can’t get it otherwise!
Minimizing interaction through no-​UI techniques prevents the danger of the user experience being more about the device or app, rather than navigating the complexities of everyday life.
constant interaction with mobile maps results in a number of cognitive difficulties for users, such as a diminished ability to build detailed mental models of their surroundings, a failure to notice important landmarks and a detraction from the pleasure of the experience of visiting a new place
Mobile users tend to focus on the routes between landmarks, while using a paper map gives a better understanding of the whole area. Examples of No-​UI Interaction For the reasons stated above, considerable research has gone into reducing the interaction to multimodal, no-UI methods on mobile devices, but there are also some examples of commercially available services which have been gaining popularity since 2015.
Mobile users tend to focus on the routes between landmarks, while using a paper map gives a better understanding of the whole area.