Entrepreneurs don’t need degrees like lawyers and doctors do. They are credentialed by virtue of their track record. The first startup is hard but if they make that one work, they end up with something much better than a college degree. They have a notch in their belt. They’ve got a track record of success. Even if the first one is a failure, I’d say that they’ve got something more than a degree.
One Thing You Don’t Need To Be An Entrepreneur: A College Degree
Twitter spam. Really? Are you even paying attention? I’ll say it again, you choose who you follow. If you’re following a newsbot, you’re going to get news spam. If you follow a good friend who can’t stop RTing, you’re going to to get retweet spam, but complaining about it is like standing the middle of a freeway asking, “Why do these cars keep hitting me?
Rands In Repose: A Twitter Decision
One free interaction” is a prospective design pattern that gives software and hardware a more humane feel. It exists outside of task flows and the concept of users as task-doers. Instead it sits in the “in between” spaces, suiting users as fidgeters, communicators, and people who play with things.
Cooper Journal: One free interaction (via davidkaneda)
It’s really hard to design products by focus groups. A lot of times, people don’t know what they want until you show it to them
Steve Jobs, 1998 (via uxquotes)
I’ve come to learn that this is one of my favorite parts of the design process: refining what’s already good to make it better. It’s like polishing a stone. Just when you think it can’t get any better, you pull out a finer grain of sandpaper and buff it to a high-polish shine.
Adam Polselli on Problems & Solutions (via jorgeq)
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