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Embracing Being a Generalist.
Generalists can pursue broader themes, questions, and lenses which, across their interests give them a deep perspective from breadth.For example, a specialist is someone who is obsessed with chess and spends their waking hours practicing, playing, and studying.A generalist is someone who is obsessed with the idea of game-play, and has researched and gone deep on sports, childhood psychology, board games, and philosophy.
Embracing being a coordinate on the map for a point in time is about allowing yourself to be seen as something specific. Generalists can feel trapped by that but the truth is being specific, and being on the map for others is a way of being in service. If you never pin yourself down (just for a time) you miss the benefits of being connected or in service.
The best design system is no system | by Tony Olsson | Jan, 2022 | Medium
Structuring documentation in multi-brand design systems by Amy Hupe, content designer.
What a Hobby Feels Like
Compilation of good macOS Software
Raycast Manual
Maccy - macOS clipboard manager
Paper Prototyping: A Cutout Kit
2021 Design Tools Survey
On novelty
Guardo.io — All of yours get back to stored in one place
Notion's Essential Date Functions
Linear – The issue tracking tool you'll enjoy using
Hours - Virtual studying made easy.
Keyboard Shortcuts for Everything
The Simple Life of Humans | Hacker Noon
Why I had to break up with the famous F-pattern in UX and move on? | by Aryan Indraksh | UX Collective
The slow collapse of Amazon’s drone delivery dream | WIRED UK
New Productivity — Benedict Evans
On bundling and rebundling services
The main takeaway from this is that we are now seeing a new wave of productivity companies that are unbundling and rebundling spreadsheets, email, and file shares into a new, more structured workflow. This is being done through vertical two-sided marketplaces that connect service providers with their customers, as well as through collaboration-first web applications. Additionally, we are seeing LinkedIn unbundled in the same way as Excel, creating a new wave of company creation. All of this is being driven by the fact that everyone is now online and expects to be able to do everything with a smartphone.
there are dozens of companies that remix some combination of lists, tables, charts, tasks, notes, light-weight databases, forms, and some kind of collaboration, chat or information-sharing. All of these things are unbundling and rebundling spreadsheets, email and file shares.
LinkedIn tried to take the flat, dumb address book and turn it into both structured flow and a network of sorts. But by doing that for everyone, it has the same problem as a spreadsheet, file share or email - it’s a flat, lowest-common-denominator canvas that doesn’t capture the flows that many particular professions or tasks need.
There’s clearly a point in the life of any company where you should move from the list you made in a spreadsheet to the richer tools you can make in coolproductivityapp.io. But when that tool is managing a thousand people, you might want to move it into a dedicated service. After all, even Craigslist started as an actual email list and ended up moving to a database. But then, at a certain point, if that task is specific to your company and central to what you do, you might well end up unbundling Salesforce or SAP or whatever that vertical is and go back to the beginning.
every application category is getting rebuilt as a SaaS web application, allowing continuous development, deployment, version tracking and collaboration. As Frame.io (video!) and OnShape (3D CAD!) show, there’s almost no native PC application that can’t be rebuilt on the web. In parallel, everything now has to be native to collaboration, and so the model of a binary file saved to a file share will generally go away over time
an entire generation now grew up after the web, and grew up with smartphones, and assumes without question that every part of their life can be done with a smartphone. In 1999 hiring ‘roughnecks’ in a mobile app would have sounded absurd - now it sounds absurd if you’re not. And that means that a lot of tasks will get shifted into software that were never really in software at all before.
The Bezos Identity. Jeff Bezos exits with Amazon frameworks… | by M.G. Siegler | Jul, 2021 | 500ish
What’s All This About Journaling? - The New York Times
The Secret, Essential Geography of the Office | WIRED
Reimagining Design Systems at Spotify | by Spotify Design | Spotify Design | Medium
Opinion | Filing Taxes in Japan Is a Breeze. Why Not Here? - The New York Times
The dribbblisation of design | Inside Intercom
How the biggest consumer apps got their first 1,000 users - Issue 25 - Lenny's Newsletter
How Film School Helped Me Make Better User Experiences
True Respect is the Difference
An Interview with Sagi Haviv | Create