User experience guidelines
MAI is a wearable companion that supports industrial workers through their daily tasks.
Core principles
Companion, not complexity
MAI assists without demanding attention. The interface should guide users naturally through their workflow, not force them to learn a new system.
Industrial-first interaction
Every design decision considers gloved hands, noisy environments, time pressure, and the need for fast decisions. What works on a smartphone may not work on the warehouse floor.
Context over content
Show the right information at the right moment. Too much information is as problematic as too little—MAI should anticipate what the user needs next.
Prevent, don't just correct
Build workflows that guide users away from mistakes. Good design makes errors difficult to make in the first place.
Intended audience
Integrators and developers implementing custom workflows. These guidelines show you how to create intuitive interfaces that reduce cognitive load and help workers stay focused on their primary responsibilities.
Project managers understanding implementation scope and constraints
Operations teams optimizing worker efficiency and reducing training time
What makes MAI unique
MAI is the first-of-its-kind wearable companion that transforms how industrial workers interact with technology.
Wearable intelligence at your fingertips - Offers real-time process guidance, seamless communication, and instant reporting.
Future-ready adaptability - Supports ongoing software updates—unlike static hardware solutions—and ensures evolution alongside your workforce.
Seamless task switching - Allows workers to move to the next process by a simple touch without changing tools or stopping work.
Complete workflow control - Includes photo and audio reporting capabilities, allowing workers to flag issues instantly without disrupting work.
Ergonomic excellence - It's the smallest and lightest device in its category, weighing just 65 g and designed for all-day comfort.
MAI doesn't just scan. It guides, communicates, documents, and adapts to support workers through complete workflows.
How to use this guide
Each section includes practical recommendations, template examples, and common pitfalls to avoid. Design for how users work—not just how the system works.
Note
These guidelines help you create effective workflows for industrial environments. Focus on clarity, simplicity, and error prevention.