'How to Blow Up a Pipeline' Is the Movie Everyone Needs to See Right Now
About Maggie Appleton
I sit at the intersection of design, anthropology, and programming. These three are at the core of everything I make. Combining them into a coherent career is a weird and ongoing challenge.Titles and disciplines are fickle and fleeting. But my work fits under the umbrellas of UX design, visual interface design, and DX (developer experience). With some cultural analysis, writing, and visual illustration sprinkled on top.
Folk Interfaces
You can look at an interface and see it as a clearly signposted user journey you should follow. Or you can see it as a collection of functions and affordances to repurpose. As raw material, rather than a guided path.
What I've Learned from Users
The reason startups are so counterintuitive is that they're so
different from most people's other experiences. No one knows what
it's like except those who've done it. Which is why YC partners
should usually have been founders themselves.
the essence of what happens at YC is to figure out which
problems matter most, then cook up ideas for solving them — ideally
at a resolution of a week or less — and then try those ideas and
measure how well they worked. The focus is on action, with measurable,
near-term results.
A small improvement in navigational ability can make you a lot faster, because it has a double effect: the path is shorter, and you can travel faster along it when you're more certain it's the right one. That's where a lot of YC's value lies, in helping founders get an extra increment of focus that lets them move faster. And since moving fast is the essence of a startup, YC in effect makes startups more startup-like.Speed defines startups. Focus enables speed. YC improves focus.
However good you are, good colleagues make you better. Indeed, very
ambitious people probably need colleagues more than anyone else,
because they're so starved for them in everyday life.
Ben Gilbert on Twitter
Savannah Niles (@sannabh) / Twitter
Paul Trillo on TikTok
Navigator - Colin Dunn
Jazz Is The Music Of The Universe
Avengers Endgame | Title Sequence Design - PERCEPTION
Adobe apologizes for repeated Creative Cloud outages
Enter Dynamic Island, a major hint at Apple's Extended Reality (XR) strategy
⭐️ Effortless personal productivity (or how I learned to love my monkey mind)
What I learned about the future from listening to 223 YC startup pitches
Inspirational Websites Roundup #41 | Codrops
CIETY
Stable Diffusion is a really big deal
Design system interviews - Formaat
How Games Can Give Insights and Solutions to UX Problems
Jessica Hische - The Dark Art of Pricing
r/changemyview - CMV: Anyone can experience racism, including white people
Everyone can - and often does - have confident opinions about those questions. But you can't really answer them in any objective way unless we can agree on a definition of the word.There are basically two categories of definitions:The interpersonal definitions. Something like "Prejudice or antagonism directed against another person based on their membership in a racial group."The sociological definitions. Something like "A highly organized system of 'race'-based group privilege that operates at every level of society and is held together by a sophisticated ideology of color/'race' supremacy."
“Eliminated the idea of personal racism” is kinda an overstatement isn’t it? Like yeah, it exists, but interpersonal racism against white people just doesn’t do anything, or at least nothing worse than any other kind of insult like calling them an asshole. It maybe hurts white feelings a little and that’s it, but most white people don’t even seem offended by terms like “Mayo monkey” or “cracker” and I would guess it’s because those terms aren’t representative of white people being systemically oppressed for being white, since that’s never been a thing. There’s an important distinction in that things like N word or the propaganda trying to paint black and brown people as being criminals is literally tied to slavery
Basically, these kinds of disagreements boil down to there being two ways to define racism: a colloquial definition, where racism is just treating someone differently due to their race, and a more academic definition drawn from the social sciences and philosophy where racism is, to use the standard simplification "prejudice plus power."
You're using the first definition, on which you are correct that it appears to be possible to be racist against white people; and your sister is using the second, on which she is correct that it would seem impossible to be racist to white people, at least in the context of a society where whites are and have historically been in a position of power over other racial groups.
The Weakness of Xi Jinping: How Hubris and Paranoia Threaten China’s Future
What’s the Role of Branding in the TV Streaming Age?
r/apple - Pro tip for people using Chrome on Apple Silicon Macs
Mac App Store and investing engineering time
Into the Personal-Website-Verse · Matthias Ott – User Experience Designer
Astro | Build faster websites
Index - Grant Custer
5 ways virtual reality is flipping the script on screenwriting
Fractal creativity
Let’s say you present 3 directions to a client: directions A, B, and C. These are our initial 3 branches. You have a client review, direction C is the winner, and so you iterate again. 3 more branches: C1, C2, and C3. Another review, another winner, another round of iterations: C2.1, C2.2, C2.3. Branch out, choose one, zoom in, branch out, repeat.
Sometimes, the design process requires us to zoom out. Let’s say you present those 3 creative directions, A, B, and C, but nothing lands. Back to the drawing board. You might keep pushing forward with branches D, E, F. Nothing lands. You’re forced to zoom out and realize that you’re not even on the right parent branch.