A [sneak peek][1] at some of what’s up my sleeve these days (man, my sleeves are getting awfully snug…).
[1]: http://dgt.unquiet.net/
After reading a bunch of articles on ‘how to accomplish great things’, seeing how many people I know are beginning to make their dreams reality, and wanting to push my own envelope a little; and knowing […]
In _[Striking a balance][1]_, Stuart Frisby (nice design, by the way - I’ve been working on something slightly similar) poses the question:
> Can Joe Blog and make a living through one site? or is it necessary to completely sever all ties between the two?
[1]: http://www.36-degrees.co.uk/index.php?subaction=showfull&id=1120436294&archive=&start_from=&ucat=34
I’ve been pondering the same thing for quite a […]
In [his response][1] to my post _[Tools and evolution][2]_, Michal writes about local vs. global optimization, how small changes often improve the entire process, and inefficiencies in the larger picture may actually be necessary. It makes a lot of sense and is essentially the same point I was trying to make, though I might not […]
[The Art & Science of Web Design][1] turned 5 the other day. I remember this is one of the more important books in my web dev library.
To commemorate, the author (Jeff Veen) has made available a PDF version of the whole book. [Go get it][2] (3.5 mb download)!
[1]: http://www.veen.com/jeff/archives/000747.html
[2]: http://veen.com/artsci/veen-artsci.pdf
My friend Michal recently wrote about [Software and change][1], exploring the idea that
>[S]oftware that doesn’t result in a behaviour change has very little value.
I agree, with the caveat that _software that __forces__ behavioral change_ also has very little value. As an example, look at [del.icio.us][2], a ’social bookmarking’ application that, despite its current audience […]