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From YouTube: Compliance: UX Office Hours (2021-03-17)
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A
Hey
everyone:
my
name
is
austin
a
product
designer
here
at
git
lab
short
week,
so
short
video,
hopefully
first
thing
on
the
agenda,
this
change
that
was
added
to
pajamas
to
define
using
table
sortable,
so
we
defined
some
usability
parameters
around
implementing
this.
The
general
gas
we've
gotten
is
even
though
maybe
the
final
design
hasn't
been
fully
flushed
out.
Yet
we
actually
have
some
guidance
now,
because
I
know
a
lot
of
teams
have
been
asking
hey.
I
want
to
add
a
sortable
column
to
my
table.
How
do
I
do
that?
Now?
A
I
spent
some
good
time
in
figma
on
monday
and
a
little
bit
on
tuesday
revisiting
an
older
issue
from
last
fall
after
syncing
up
with
some
of
the
other
designers
and
other
team
members
around
the
work
that
they've
been
doing
so
I'll.
A
Protected
branches
was
already
a
really
tight
space,
so
I
was
trying
to
think
of
ways
that
we
could
synthesize
down
the
amount
of
information
and
then
leverage
other
components
like
a
drawer
or
a
dedicated
page
for
the
creation
of
these
things,
or
maybe
a
modal
not
totally
sure
but
still
kind
of
hashing
out
what
some
of
those
logistics
are.
I'm
going
to
be
trying
to
break
this
into
two
pieces.
Basically,
let's
reach
feature
parity
with
protective
branches.
First
then
worry
about
some
of
the
complexities
around.
How
do
we
deal
with
some
of
those
other
issues.
A
I
also
give
a
presentation
today
on
the
ux
showcase
you
can
watch
that
here.
If
you'd
like
I
talk
about
how
I've
been
bringing
some
design
decisions
into
merge,
requests
to
keep
communication
synthesized
together
and
also
bringing
those
decisions
closer
to
the
change
themselves,
and
then
I
really
want
to
highlight
this
neat
catch
around
accessibility
that
peter
found.
So
he
highlighted
what
the
experience
was
like
if
you're
using
your
voiceover
tool
in
safari,
safari
or
approvals
by
author,
so
just
kind
of
walk.
A
A
Firefox
has
a
pretty
neat
beta
feature
under
accessibility.
Where
you
can
say
show
me
the
tabbing
order,
and
this
will
show
you
exactly
how
you
tab
through
a
page
and
where
all
it
goes
through
and
then
that's
the
thing
in
terms
of
being
able
to
see
a
layout
like
that.
So
that's
pretty
neat
in
case
you're
ever
checking
for
accessibility.