Podcasts about fiftythree

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Best podcasts about fiftythree

Latest podcast episodes about fiftythree

Taking Inventory
Snap Mafia Edition: Ellis Hamburger, founder of Meaning, storyteller at The Browser Co, and the voice of Snap for 7 years

Taking Inventory

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2024 50:59


This episode is brought to you by Market. Use AI to chat directly with your marketing and sales channels to get the answers you need to grow your business. Sign-up for Market at https://www.withmarket.ai/.  ——— Ellis was Snapchat's first writer, building and refining the brand voice and executing it across all channels — from marketing campaigns to press pitches, UX writing, sales narratives, product packaging, and even the receipts from the Spectacles vending machine. Ellis wrote Snapchat's first TV commercial, and concepted its first global brand campaign, Real friends, solidifying Snapchat's value proposition to consumers. Ellis was previously at The Verge and Insider where he wrote about the brightest products of the time, like Mailbox, Path, Paper by FiftyThree, VSCO, Tumblr, Foursquare, and more. Since Snap he has worked at The Browser Company and is now bringing his experience across marketing, comms, and design to his newly founded Meaning Company where he is helping founders craft holistic product storytelling that moves culture and drives impact.   Check out what Ellis is building with Meaning and how he's helping founders they'll their story. ——— Connect with James and Daniel! LinkedIn: James: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jamesborow/  Daniel: https://www.linkedin.com/in/danieldruger/  Twitter:  James: https://twitter.com/jamesborow  Daniel: https://twitter.com/ddruger If you like Taking Inventory, do us a favor and give us a 5-star rating and review. It's the best way to help support us. And subscribe to our newsletter: https://www.takinginventorypod.com/ and follow Taking Inventory on LinkedIn and Twitter!

Design Better Podcast
Georg Petschnigg: Product design and storytelling at The New York Times

Design Better Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2023 54:01


Subscribe to the Design Better Podcast on Substack to get episodes a week early and other bonus content: https://designbetterpodcast.com/ Show notes: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/georg-petschnigg-product-design-and#details *** The New York Times has gone through many challenges and evolutions during its storied history. Founded in 1851—when it was called the New-York Daily Times—it faced draft riots during the Civil War, received the first telegraph transmission from a naval battle in 1904, and was involved in libel suits in the 1960's that helped establish freedom of the press through the US Supreme Court But it's within the past 25 years or so that the “Newspaper of Record” has undergone some of its most radical transformations: shifting much of its focus away from the printed page to the web and app ecosystem, and expanding into food with NYT Cooking, consumer product reviews with The Wirecutter, and podcasts with The Daily. Today we chat with Georg Petschnigg, SVP of Product Design at the New York Times, about what it takes to balance the tension between the rich legacy of the Times with the rapidly evolving digital landscape. We also talk about designing across products and platforms for a more unified experience, creating a tight coupling between design and engineering, and what the future holds for news products in a world where AI and ML can facilitate content creation but also manufacture deception. Before we get to the show, we wanted to let you know about a cool project that our friend Felix Lee started called ADPList. If you're early in your career, or if you're in the midst of a transition, you might want to connect with top-notch professionals in design. Well, now you can now tap into the knowledge and wisdom of some of the most prominent figures in the design industry. And best of all, it's completely free!  ADPList is a community platform on a mission to democratize mentorship for all, with over 16,000 verified mentors contributing worldwide; opening up an entire world of possibilities for mentorship and networking. Join ADPList today—for free—and accelerate your career growth. Visit https://dbtr.co/adplist Bio Georg Petschnigg is an executive, entrepreneur, and product leader. He feels most comfortable at the intersection of design, technology, and business. He currently serves as Head of Product Design at The New York Times. Throughout his career, he's created products that changed how people work, create, and see the world. He believes technology needs to serve the human need to create.  Georg co-founded FiftyThree in 2011 and served as CEO until WeTransfer's acquisition in 2018. FiftyThree are the makers of Paper®, the fast and beautiful productivity app for getting ideas down, Paste® the fastest way for teams to share and gather around their ideas, and Pencil, the award-winning stylus. Internationally recognized for design excellence and innovation, they've received awards from Apple, IDSA, Communication Arts, and IxDA. FiftyThree's products reach more than 30 Million creative thinkers worldwide and defined mobile creativity.  This episode is brought to you by: Methodical Coffee: Roasted, blended, brewed, served and perfected by verified coffee nerds

Sketchnote Army Podcast
Ty Hatch loves the joy of creating random doodles - S13/E07

Sketchnote Army Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2023 45:14


In this episode, Ty Hatch, who started sketchnoting as a practice to pay attention and stay awake shares why he still loves the art and his work on creating headshot illustrations and creating sketchnotes for meetings and conferences.Sponsored by ConceptsThis episode of the Sketchnote Army Podcast is brought to you by Concepts, a perfect tool for sketchnoting, available on iOS, Windows, and Android.Concepts' vector-based drawing feature gives you the power to adjust your drawings — any time you like. You can nudge the curve of a line, swap out one brush for another, or change stroke thickness and color at any stage of your drawing — saving hours and hours of rework.Vectors provide clean, crisp, high-resolution output for your sketchnotes at any size you need — large or small. Never worry about fuzzy sketchnotes again.Concepts is a powerful, flexible tool that's ideal for sketchnoting.SEARCH “Concepts” in your favorite app store to give it a try.Running OrderIntroWelcomeWho is Ty Hatch?Origin StoryTy's current workSponsor: ConceptsTipsToolsWhere to find TyOutroLinksAmazon affiliate links support the Sketchnote Army Podcast.Ty's websiteTy on TwitterTy on InstagramTy on LinkedInTy on MastodonTy on PinterestTy on Artist Trading CardsTy On DribbleUX Week 2008 SketchnotesInktoberTy's Son's Pokémon DrawingsToolsAmazon affiliate links support the Sketchnote Army Podcast. Mechanical pencilBallpoint Rotring 600 pencilKaweco fountain penPost-It-NotesGlobal Art Materials SketchbookMoleskine Art sketchbookSketchnote Idea bookPaper by WeTransferiPad ProApple pencilProcreate Adobe FrescoTipsEverybody is creative in their own way, and that's okay.Enjoy what you do. You can like a range of different things, and that's okay.Set boundaries for the things that are really important to you, in your life that are not work-related. Set those boundaries, talk about them, and live your life in a way that reflects your priorities. CreditsProducer: Alec PulianasTheme music: Jon SchiedermayerShownotes and transcripts: Esther OdoroSubscribe to the Sketchnote Army PodcastYou can subscribe to the podcast through iTunes, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube or your favorite podcast listening source.Support the PodcastTo support the creation, production and hosting of the Sketchnote Army Podcast, buy one of Mike Rohde's bestselling books. Use code ROHDE40 at Peachpit.com for 40% off!Episode TranscriptMike Rohde: Hey everyone, this is Mike, and I'm here with Ty Hatch. Ty, welcome to the show. It's so good to have you.Ty Hatch: Thanks, Mike. It's great to be here.MR: Ty, we've known each other for years and years. We were talking about when we thought we connected, you had a pretty pinpoint accurate time-point.TH: Yeah. It's funny. Back in 2008, I went to a UX Week, which was a conference put on by, for those that remember Adaptive Path, I think they got purchased and became the in-house UX department for Capital One a few years ago. I was there and I was like, "I need to pay attention." Did some sketch notes, or just did notes, I wasn't thinking about it. Got an email from you after I posted them up on the OG photo-sharing Flickr, and you're like, "Hey, can I put these into my Sketch Note Army?" And so, we just stayed in touch throughout the years since then, so.MR: Yep. Well, that leads right into telling us a little bit about who you are and what you do.TH: You bet. I am a UX manager for O.C. Tanner, which is an employee recognition company. I help create the space for employee recognition. I Work with a team. I have three people on my team. We're part of a larger experience group, and we focus on how can people feel appreciated at work by the employers. It's a really fun thing to do. I also, as you know, do sketch notes at times and random doodles and whatnot when the time allows. That's me. I enjoy UX design. It's a fun problem space to be in.MR: Well, I can relate to that as a UX principle, UX designer. I find it fascinating as well. I focus on software, but there are tons of opportunities to make things better, always, seems like. It's good to hear you're focusing on that, and that's such a critical space, especially now with all the challenges of hiring people and maintaining employees, and having them not leave by recognition. Huge, huge opportunities there, I would think.TH: Yeah. It's huge. You, like me, it's hard to feel sometimes like you're moving the needle and you're making a difference for people. One of the things that really gets me going is knowing that the work that I'm doing is actually helping people feel that appreciation, that they get that recognition from not only their peers, but from their leaders and whatnot.MR: Yep. Super important. It's something that often goes under the radar and managers might not think much about it, but is so critical. Often it doesn't cost you much other than time and a little bit of thoughtfulness. So, that's really cool. I would love to hear a little bit more about how you ended up in the space where you are both professionally, but also as a sketchnoter. Had you always drawn since you were a little kid? What's been your history? Let's start from when you're just a little guy.TH: I spent a lot of time outdoors growing up. I grew up in Southern Idaho and southeastern Washington. Miles outside of my small town. There wasn't much to do there. We were too far out to get TV reception. We often joked we got matching ants on our TV screen because this was back in the days before cable. We had terrible TV reception on our black and white TV. We did have indoor plumbing, and electricity, so that was always good.My brother and I, we would leave the house, go out in the backyard. We didn't have neighbors at the time, and so, we would just go out sometime after breakfast and typically we'd come back around dinnertime 'cause we were hungry. We would always have some sort of adventure and whatnot. I think at some point, a friend of ours introduced us to Dungeons and Dragons and I became a really big fantasy nut.This was the early days of D&D. I used to have a first edition, Monster Manual and Player CanBall and DMS Guide and all that. We colored them, I coloring books 'cause they were all just black and white illustrations. I loved it. Got into reading books and whatnot. Wanted to play football, but didn't seem to get enough interest for college people. We were in a small town, nobody really knows what's going on with a small town.I served a mission for my church for a couple years and then returned home. I was visiting my grandparent's house, and this is probably my favorite story about what got me into what I do today is there was this really awesome a couple of these burly looking pirates on it. I was like, "Well, this is cool, visual stimuli to get someone board at grandma and grandpa's house, right? It said the white family, I said, "Oh, that's a Piratey name."I was like, "Oh, let's read about these pirates." It wasn't pirates. It was a story about the artistic legacy of NC Wyatt and his son Andrew, and his grandson Jamie. I just got hooked and in fact, I have a self-portrait from that issue that I took out of the magazine. I think I found a couple copies over the years. But there was a really little self-portrait that he did that I have hanging on my wall.There was some painters tape. And I was like, "Oh, you get paid doing art? What? Completely radical concept for me. I'd always loved comic books. My brother and I collected comics over the years. I figured, I was like, "Oh, what can I do with art?" I started exploring the different art-related careers and I stumbled upon graphic design because as I learned about illustration as a career, I was like, "That's really competitive. I don't know that I'm good enough to compete there, but I can definitely think visually and solve problems." So, I tended toward that.That was about the time I was a junior at state school in Washington State where I'd met my wife and I applied for an art school in Portland and I'm like, "There's no way they'll let me in." But surprisingly, they did. I finished a BFA in graphic design. My senior capstone project there at the time was a website, this is what? 1998 I wanna say. Right about the time my oldest was born. And my senior project was an informational website on typography, which is still out there.I did a really quick redesign of it the next year 'cause it was a hideous thing when I got looking at it in reality. But it's still fitting there, 20-some-odd years later. It was an informational website about typography. Cause actually, I fell in love with typography in school. That's one of the things I absolutely loved. I was like, "Oh, could I make money doing typography?" I was like, "No, I can't." Type is another one of those professions, it's a very niche specialty.MR: Yeah. You can do it, but you have to really work at it.TH: Yeah. But I love design. I love the visual solving of problems and communicating clearly with design. For several years, I did that and slowly over time morphed into more of an interaction UX designer. Just as the industry changed, I'm like, "This is a good thing. This can provide for me and my family and I enjoy doing it." You slowly over the years gravitated into technology and doing UX.That was the thing that got me where I'm at. Particularly doing sketchnotes, like the sketch note that I did at UX Week was the first time that I actually shared anything that I'd done like that. I would do 'em in my sketchbooks 'cause it helped me process what was being communicated, presentations that I would go to.I really took off though, I wanna say about 2014, 2015 when I got my first iPad. There's this little app that was really cool. I'm like, "This is cool." I was trying to use it with my finger, but the company that made the app, which is Paper. The company at the time was called, FiftyThree.MR: FiftyThree. Yep.TH: I think I got one of their styluses, which looked like a carpenter's pencil. I was like, "This is cool." But I didn't like the drag of the rubber on it, but it made my finger drawings not as crappy. I'd used that stylus. I tried to play around with it a bit more. Then Apple introduced the pencil and it was a game changer for me.I've dabbled a bit with other applications, but the Paper is still my go-to when it comes to sketchiness because of how it works. I still maintain sketchbooks. I have one now. It's more random skulls and patterns and headshots. Like you see I participate in October each year, which is a drawing challenge. If you go over into my Instagram, you'll see that I have a few. I think I actually made it through all 31 days this year.MR: You did.TH: Which is like maybe the second or third time that I've done it. I've completed Inktober. But that's just fun. It's a good challenge to just do random headshots. I enjoy the personalities that come out of those headshots. That's a bit of how I got into it, what I've been doing.MR: Wow. And now, do you still do sketchnoting from time to time?TH: I do. I haven't had as much with the pandemic. Right before the pandemic, I was actually doing a fair amount of it. I was getting contacted by conferences to help with that. I did a Mind the Product conference and did a plural site live as well. They were a lot of fun. Did the thing with—what I like about—my particular process with sketchnotes is I prefer being in person at any one event 'cause processing that real-time is the thing that I did. I've tried to do it with different random, YouTube presentations and stuff like that, but I don't get quite the energy and the vibe off of a live event.MR: Interesting. When I look at your style, I see you have a very unique ink style, I dunno how to describe it, but it looks like you're using a brush pen or something. There is some single-line work, right, but there's some that looks like it's kind of thick and thin. What is the tool that you're using to achieve that? I assume you're still on Paper, right?TH: Yeah. Looking at the ink over stuff, I typically, I'll pencil it out, I'll sketch out in pencil and then I just use fine liners. I use a fine linear and then like a 0.8. Sometimes I'll go in with the smaller one. One little tool that I saw, a Kaweco.MR: Oh, yeah.TH: I was like, I put it in my cart and it's really hard to justify that experience. Not a cheap thing, hey. But it got low enough and I'm like, okay, it was my birthday. And I was like, I told my wife, "I'm gonna splurge and get this." And like, okay. I love it. I haven't done much drawing with it. I got an extra broad nib and it's a little too thick for me. My pen addiction, my writing instrument addiction is breathing and well, and I collect art supplies when I'm trying to figure out something I wanna do. I ordered a broad nib off of Jet pens, which is not a good site if you like ready instruments. It's not good for your wallet. It's a great size.MR: Great site, and yeah, you spend a lot of money there pretty easily.TH: Oh yeah.MR: Paper now is owned by, WeTransfer the file transfer company, and still is maintained and has had some updates. Like you, I use Procreate for illustration work, but if I'm doing sketch notes, I go right to Paper. At this point, it feels really natural, the tools, I'm very aware of them. When you do sketchnoting in Paper, what are the tools that you like to use there? I'm just curious about that. Looking at, just have one of your samples up here on my screen. Looks like you're—TH: I have an iPad Pro that I use with an Apple pencil. Typically, when I do it, I'll—what I love about Paper is the intuitiveness of the tools. They have a paintbrush, they have a ink pen or fountain pen. They have a couple different types of markers and a pencil. Typically, I like to do a little sketch of the presenter. And so, if you look at it, you'll see that most frequently. Then notes around the topics they're talking about.Often, I'll get the sketch of the presenter. I do that in the quiet moments of their presentation. I'll either use the ink pen, the fountain pen version, a medium nib. It's relatively inexpensive to pay for the pro version for Procreate or for the Paper.MR: Right. It's $12 a year, I think.TH: Yeah. I'm more than happy to pay that 'cause it's given me a lot of opportunities. The thing that I love is the color mixing. They've nailed color mixing like nobody else has, and I think it's one of the best things that they've done in software. I'll use that or I'll use a one the fine liner to do the block letters and whatnot.Every now and then, I have little people pop up that are just a head body and arms, legs to sometimes self-characters and concepts that the designers are doing. Because the thing that I found really interesting with sketch notes is that it's that real-time synthesizing of the concepts that they're presenting that I get the most out of 'em. Largely, it started as a selfish practice to pay attention and stay awake, but I found that I still love doing that because it really helps me to get something outta these presentations as well. But yeah, Paper is hands down the most intuitive tool, I think, for just sketching out in general. I love it.MR: I agree. Well, we're talking a little bit about Sketchnoting specifically. We've done who you are and what you do. We got your story of your origin. Tell us a little bit about something you're working on now, whether it's work or personal that you're excited about that you can share with us.TH: Well, let's see. One of the things I'm really excited about, I have no clue how to do it, is I want to try and figure out how I can work a little bit more in conversational device. Conversational device seem to be taken a lot. There's the ChatGPT bot that everybody's talking about. All these AI-based tools, which have their place, I think. But how can I build a conversational way to present my work or to present myself?I've done some really terrible things. Experiments that will never see the light of day. One of the things I love about design is that's experimentation is part of trying to figure out a solution. You and I both know as designers, it's like, you can't really come up with a good solution unless you know what the problem is. And so, trying to figure that out from my perspective, like, okay, how can I make something like this happen and in a way that I can somehow manage, right?I will fully admit to being an old school. It's like my personal psych is there. I think I got a redesign out last year that I'm really happy with. That was the seven-year cycle of refreshing a personal site. It seems like seven to eight years is about the time it takes for me to get around to saying, "I should probably redesign my personal site." And actually, finding the time to do it.I want to, being able to maintain that in a way because with all the different social media things, it's really hard to improvise where your content is in a good way. 'Cause if you post on social media, you don't have a real centralized location for any of the content that you can put out. You have to say, "I'm gonna focus on this platform."That's really the dangerous thing, I think. How do you position yourself not only as a working professional, a design professional like we're as an artist you know, and give yourself a home where people know, "Oh, if I go here, I'll be able to find and go look at all the other things."'Cause as much as I love social media and Instagram, I'm tired of seeing an ad every third post in Instagram as I scroll through my feed. Then you have other social media services that kinda self-destruct. I want to have a good centralized location, and I haven't been able to get that fully done yet.'Cause as much as everybody loves WordPress and it powers so many sites, you have to really want to put in that time and effort to make WordPress work. There's other platforms and stuff too, but it's like, how can you make your content your own and have it in a place that everybody can know, "Okay, if I go here, I'll find their stuff." I'm trying to figure that out for myself.MR: That's something that challenged me as well. Years ago, I decided to go to Squarespace just because I could build what I wanted and not think too much about it, and constrained me a lot. Paper does provide, and it's grown to meet my needs over time. That's been really good to secure as well. I had an instance where I ran websites on WordPress and didn't update, and someone was running a legal pharmaceutical site buried in my website, and I was like, "All right. Not doing that anymore."I was out on WordPress self-hosting and switched to Squarespace, and it's been a good experience. But yeah, I felt the same way you talk about, you know, scrolling through Instagram, it feels like more and more of its ads and less and less of its actual content. I have to really fight through the ads to actually get to my friends for interesting things, and that's frustrating. Someone's going to hopefully solve that problem soon.TH: There's a lot of different platforms out there, you know, Mastodon is taking off, but it's like, in my mind, it's a little too complex for the normal person. Just about everything, you have to feed the algorithm. You have to continually be putting stuff out there to maintain any audience. People have lives outside of posting on social media.One thing I think in general that people don't think about too much is I have a life that is very important to me with my family, and it's like, I'm not gonna be posting all the time for these different platforms. It's great. I love doing it, but it's like, that's not my primary, one of my key focuses.MR: That's the question everybody has to ask, right, to what am I gonna feed this thing? What are its expectations of me? 'Cause sometimes you come to realize that these platforms have expectations for what they want you to do that doesn't align with what you wanna do. You have to make that decision because you only get so much time. It keeps going away. That's really fascinating. Well, I hope that redesigning your website goes well. I know what that feels like. I haven't done it for a while, so I know what a challenge it is.TH: I appreciate that. One thing I'm really interested in trying out, and maybe I'll be doing it a little bit this week a bit if I can, is AWS has this thing called Amplify Studio where they've pre-built some components and whatnot, in React powered by a Figma template. And so, you change your components in the Figma template, connect your account, and you should be able to launch out some app or whatever.I have the template, it's been taunting and mocking me for several months since I discovered it. An inanimate software can't do that. AI might be able to do that, but inanimate software doesn't necessarily do that as you're constant saying, "Hey, you got this, are you gonna do something at some point?"MR: For those who don't know, Figma is a design tool, vector-based design tool where many designers build often their prototypes and their mockups with. What Ty's talking about is he would build a mockup of his site and then use React, which is kind of a backend technology, I think is a fair way to describe it populated by—TH: It's a JavaScript framework—MR: Framework, that's the word I was looking for.TH: Yeah. Just help build out components. AWS is Amazon Web Services, which is the—basically simple way of looking at it is they provide a lot of the Cloud hosting services for a lot of providers. When your services aren't working, there might be an AWS outage somewhere causing some of that stuff. When the internet services go down, sometimes there's outage with some of these cloud providers—MR: Well later in the show, we'll definitely have a link to your website. Maybe by the time this episode launches, you'll have a new site up there that people can look at.TH: It gives me a goal to work on.MR: There you go. There you go. Let's take a little shift now and talk about tools. We've hinted at some, you talked about Paper by WeTransfer as a digital tool. Let's jump back into analog, and more specifically, are there brands of pens that you like, brands of paper, notebooks, pencils, so that people who are listening can dig them up and maybe experiment a little bit?TH: Absolutely. Right now, if I look at my desk, I have a mechanical pencil, and I'll send you some links so you can put these in show notes. It's a mechanical pencil, 0.51 with a metal coral is by Uni. The nice thing is, when you have a metal pencil, you'll often have this little nib that kinda gets bent and breaks. But what's nice about this pencil is that it retracts. It's fairly affordable. I think it's like maybe about 15 bucks. It's not a polymer is on the back of it.I also love fine liners. I've gotten the rounds with a whole bunch, I have some, Copics. The current one that I'm using is a Uni pen fine liner. I've found that I really like these really good waterproof so I can lay down watercolor washes or alcohol on so on. I got this one earlier this year. We did a team offsite. We got a rotating 600.MR: Those beautiful pens.TH: It was a Ballpoint. I'm not such a huge fan of ballpoint pens. But I discovered that Kaweco makes a gel pin insert refill, and so, I got a Kaweco gel pen insert in there. Then have a Kaweco fountain little porch fountain pen. The thing that amazes me-- yeah, it's tinier than I thought it was, but the thing I love about it is that the ink just flows and it's beautiful. It's really great.As far as what do I draw on, in the day, it's often post notes, making lists, and whatnot. I have sketchbooks. Right now, I'm using one. I've been experimenting a little bit with what I want to use for sketchbooks and stuff. This one's by a company, Global Art materials. It's just a generic kinda sketchbook.For years and years, I've used Moleskin's Art sketchbooks, which are great. I love that size. I got a eight by eight, or seven and a half by seven and a half watercolor sketchbook. I found that that was a little too precious. I was like, "Oh, I gotta do art in this stuff." I got the Kickstarter for "The Sketchnote Idea Book."MR: Thank you.TH: I love it, Mike. It's fantastic. The pages are bright white, which I absolutely love and they held all sorts of things. I got some watercolor in my old one. I have one somewhere, an Emergency Kit in case I have to go somewhere. I have another one somewhere that I'm like, lemme experiment with this stuff, and then maybe I'll get back to the Idea book. I found that that notebook that you guys put together was really one of my favorites in recent years.MR: Great.TH: The quality of the paper and the whiteness and the thickness made it really, really flexible. The only thing for me is maybe it was a hair too big, a little too wide. I like a little bit smaller, but I absolutely love the paper quality you guys did on that. Then like sketch notes or not sketch notes, but on the Ink Tobra drawings, I found a five by seven Strathmore 400 pad of paper that's really thick that I absolutely love.All of the years, and 2021s, I only did like 16 of them. I have all those originals hanging out on a piece of paper somewhere. One my goals with my personal site is to be able to set up a way to sell some of these 'cause that's fun or good if this is just sitting and collecting dust in your house. If you do it, I think that one of the real choices of making art is sharing it with people and helping them appreciate it. One of the things I wanna get going as well.MR: That sounds good. As far as digital, you talked about, of course, Paper. We got into that a little bit already. Are there any other tools that you like to play with? Or is that your go-to for pretty much everything?TH: I do have Procreate on my iPad. My kids use it a lot more than I do. One thing I found is I don't like the glossy slide of the Apple pencil on just a make a screen so I have a textured screen protector on it to give it that textural fill of paper. I found that that makes a huge difference for making marks on iPad. That's really it. I've toyed with, Adobe Fresco, Concepts app. There's one that the Icon Factory does, I can't remember it's Ben's go-to tool.MR: I think Ben Crothers likes that—Ben Norris likes that one.TH: Norris, yeah. I dabbled that a little bit. What I like about Paper is the ability to go from pencil to ink to watercolor. The brush that they have in Paper is fantastic. How you can lay your color, make it deeper and rich if you want.I haven't been able to get Procreate to do that. Procreate's a fantastic tool. I love it. But for Sketch notes, to me, it feels like it's a little too powerful. What I love about Paper is Paper's really good at just capturing your flow of thinking, whereas you have to be a lot more deliberate in your usage of Procreate. Although, if you're a Concept artist or somebody that's doing stuff like that, then absolutely that's a great place.My son does a lot of—he loves Pokemon, he loves Mario. He's been doing it. He's gonna be turning 25 this next year. And I'm like, "Dude, you could do commissions of people's Pokemon on teams." He does this fantastic stuff. I'll send you a link to his Pokemon stuff. He'll do characters and whatnot. He's drawn so many Mario things. He's drawn hundreds of Pokemon and he gets them scaled. I just absolutely love looking at his stuff. I'm like, "Dude, you could probably do something with this. "But he's like, "Yeah, I know Dad, but I do this for fun." Which is great.MR: That sounds like a great variety of tools. You had quite a span. Some that I hadn't thought about, especially the Kaweco. I think it was the Kaweco insert that goes into the Rotring, I think you talked about. 'Cause I'm not a ballpoint fan either. There's a Schaffer insert that I use in my Retro 51s that I really like too. Probably a similar insert, I suppose.TH: I really like the Kaweco one. There's another one that seems to get pretty good reviews that I've seen on, I wanna call it Otto.MR: Oh yeah. Otto. I've had otto. Yeah, those are great. That's Japanese, I think.TH: Mark-making on a budget is a big deal for me. It's not necessarily the tools that make the person, it's what you do with the tools that you have. I think having a widely available set of tools is really important, but also making sure that they're budget-friendly, right?MR: Mm-hmm.TH: Is an important thing too.MR: Yep. I totally agree. Let's make one last shift into tips. The way I frame this is to imagine someone's listening. Maybe they're kind of at a plateau, or they just need some inspiration, little inspiration, little boost. What'd be three tips you would give that person to encourage them in their sketchnoting or visual thinking or just thinking, doing visual work experience.TH: The first tip, and I think this is a pretty important one. I've had a lot of people, when they find out I'm a designer, they throw, "Oh, I'm not artistic." And to me, it's not about being artistic. It's about being creative. I like to tell people everyone's creative in their own way. How you express your creativity is going to be different than how I express my creativity.My creativity comes out in the form of sketch notes and these random headshot illustrations that I do. Your creativity may be that you are a fantastic accountant and you can come up with really great ways to make things better and more efficient. Other people may just be fantastic books or bakers. Everybody expresses their creativity differently.It's not about being artistic, it's about expressing yourself in the work that you do. I think it's perfectly okay to admire for somebody's work and say, "Oh, that's fantastic," and be a fan of it, but also not beat yourself up like, "Oh, I'm not that good at because I can't draw like my sorority and illustrate all these school books." I can draw my own thing and I can be happy with it. And so, I think my first one would be, everybody is creative in their own way, and that's okay.With that, it goes to what I would say is my second tip is enjoy what you do. That it's really hard, I think, especially today for people to feel like, oh, I can enjoy this. I think you need to give yourself permission to enjoy those things that you find pleasing. There's so many things out there today, it's easy to get overwhelmed with them.I think it's okay to be nerdy and geeky or really into sports or, you can like a range of different things. If my kids were tell you what I like, they'd rattle off a list of dozens of things 'cause I don't think it's good to limit yourself to liking just one thing. You can like a range of different things, and that's okay. That would be my second one.The third one is, there's a script quote from Iron Glass. You've probably heard this. You can find a YouTube video on it somewhere, but he's talking about the work that you want to do when you—everybody has a particular taste and style in their head that they imagine. But then when you try and do it, it doesn't meet those mental expectations, but you can get there by working at it.I really think that everybody's capable of doing really great stuff, but you need to work to get to that point. Don't give up, but that's the whole—and I think follow your passion is really bad advice, but I think do what you enjoy because it may be that you may not enjoy your job which is providing for you and maybe your family. But if there's something outside of that that brings you joy and that you enjoy doing, do that in a way that helps you be happy.Over time, what you do with that will match what you see in your head. There may be opportunities that come up as a result of doing that because you never know. Opportunity—I forget who said this quote. Opportunity is often masked as hard work. If you're not doing the work to prepare for the thing that you want to do when that opportunity comes, you're gonna be ill-prepared to do that, that you want to do.And so, it's important to do the things that you feel are important that you love and you'll have an opportunity at some point. Timing is really important. I'll do a fourth one because this one I feel—and I've mentioned a little bit. You need set boundaries for yourself on what you do. You need to be able to say, this is what's important to me, and these other things aren't so important.And so, when it comes down to it, you know, I won't be doing this, this, or this because it conflicts with my more important thing. For me, personally, my most important thing is my family, and everything that I do, I do—I love design. I find that an extremely fulfilling, rewarding career, but it's a means to be able to provide for the family and make sure that they're taken care of.I think that a lot of people are like, this is my hustle. This is my thing. If you put so much of yourself into that, that you identify that with that, and if that thing goes away, where are you left? Set the boundaries for the things that are really important to you in your life that are not work-related. Because I can guarantee you everybody has something that's very important to them, that it's not work-related.Set those boundaries, talk about those boundaries, and live your life in a way that reflects your priorities because as you do that, people will see that, they'll understand that, they'll respect that. And as you do those things and you express yourself through whatever creative means you have, you'll gain those opportunities to be able to do those things and then lead a more fulfilling life and that you're you're happy with. You won't be living with regrets if you do those things.MR: I love the fourth tip. That's really great. Really encouraging. Well, thank you for all those tips and we appreciate your wisdom for all of us here. It seems like just minutes and suddenly we're near the end of the show. I'd love to hear where's the best place for people to find you? Websites, social media, whatever you think would be the best place to start and connect.TH: You bet. I do have a personal site as we were talking about. It's at tyhatch.com. That's gonna be where you can find me. I have links off to all my socials. I'm on Twitter for however long that's still up. I'm on Instagram. You can find me at both of those. Most social media, you can find me at Ty Hatch. Instagram, Twitter, those have been my mainstays. I do have a profile on Mastodon as well. You can find me there tyhatch@mastodon.online. And then also most of my schedule archive of at this point in time lives over on Pinterest. You go to pinterest.com/tyhatch.com/sketchnotes. I think I have a collection of about 300 different sketch notes that I've done.MR: Oh, that's great.TH: You can find me there. I'm always happy to field any questions. If you see something you like, send me a note. Say, "Hey Ty, I really like this sketch. Do you have it?" And if it's something from October, happy to do that. I did a thing years ago, oh gosh, it's been almost 10 years. Really, Mike, I'm getting old. I did this thing about 10 years ago called Artist Trading Cards, or ATC. I think it might still be up if you go to apcs.tyhatch.I did a bunch of Artist Trading Cards. It started off ostensibly as like, "I'm gonna do a little Christmas present for coworkers." And it turned into a four-month project that I had a daily post of thumb little sketch that I did. I'm happy to sell these or trade with you if you want to trade physical objects. There's a whole range of those out there as well. It's fun. I enjoy doing random doodles and I think some point, there will be an opportunity for 'em, but until then I get to enjoy them.TH: Yep.MR: Cool. Well, we'll definitely get show notes put into the episode. So if you're anything in or any of these things pique your interest, you can go check it out. We have links to it. And thanks so much, Ty for being on the show. I'm so appreciate the work you do and the representation you put into the world and your leadership really need people like you doing that. And I'm so glad that you do it.TH: Thanks, Mike. It's been a pleasure. It's been fantastic talking with you today.MR: You too. Well, and for everyone listening, that'll wrap another episode of "The Sketchnote Army Podcast." Till the next episode, this is Mike. Talk to you soon. All right. I'm gonna stop my recording.

Lenny's Podcast: Product | Growth | Career
Competing with giants: An inside look at how The Browser Company builds product | Josh Miller (CEO)

Lenny's Podcast: Product | Growth | Career

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2023 88:37


Brought to you by Writer—Generative AI for the enterprise | Dovetail—Bring your customer into every decision | Linear—The new standard for modern software development—Josh Miller is the CEO and co-founder of The Browser Company, where he helped build Arc, my go-to web browser. In today's episode, we get an inside look at the unique structure and values of The Browser Company and how their company culture has helped them land some of the best talent in tech. Josh shares ways that his company embraces experimentation, including their “optimizing for feelings” approach to building, and explains why extreme transparency is at the forefront of everything they do.Special invite link to skip the waitlist: https://arc.net/gift/lennyFind the full transcript at: https://www.lennyspodcast.com/competing-with-giants-an-inside-look-at-how-the-browser-company-builds-product-josh-miller-ceo/#transcriptWhere to find Josh Miller:• Twitter: https://twitter.com/joshm• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/josh-miller-b31259106/Where to find Lenny:• Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com• Twitter: https://twitter.com/lennysan• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/Referenced:• Early access to Arc: https://arc.net/gift/lenny• The Browser Company: https://thebrowser.company/• Arc: https://arc.net/• Hursh Agrawal on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hurshagrawal/• Hacker News: https://news.ycombinator.com/• Scott Belsky on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottbelsky/• Notes on Roadtrips: https://thebrowser.company/values/• Shahed Khan on Twitter: https://twitter.com/_shahedk• Paper by FiftyThree:  https://www.hellobrio.com/blog/digital-drawing-paper-fiftythree• Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/• Peter Vidani on Twitter: https://twitter.com/pter• The Verge: https://www.theverge.com/• Ellis Hamburger on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ellishamburger/• Airbnb's Snow White project: https://uxdesign.cc/how-airbnb-proved-that-storytelling-is-the-most-important-skill-in-design-15d04ac71039• General Magic: https://www.generalmagicthemovie.com/• Linear: https://linear.app/• Raycast: https://www.raycast.com/• Cron: https://cron.com/• Thrive Capital: https://thrivecap.com/• Tuple: https://tuple.app/• Figma: https://www.figma.com/• Harold and the Purple Crayon: https://www.amazon.com/Harold-Purple-Crayon-Crockett-Johnson/dp/0062086529• Seeing Is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees: https://www.amazon.com/Seeing-Forgetting-Name-Thing-Sees/dp/0520256093/• God Save Texas: A Journey into the Soul of the Lone Star State: https://www.amazon.com/God-Save-Texas-Journey-State/dp/0525520104• The Last of Us on HBO: https://www.hbo.com/the-last-of-us• Adam Curtis documentaries on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLStWlBRkr0N_aYjPmbrrjm_rsstpkUBLc• Notion: https://www.notion.so/In this episode, we cover:(00:00) Josh's background(03:56) Arc and the metrics they use to track growth(04:42) Arc's retention numbers(08:22) Josh's product-building philosophy and why he believes in optimizing for feelings(18:57) How The Browser Company's values create a culture that allows them to ship so quickly(22:46) The “Notes on Roadtrips” doc about values(27:48) How Josh is able to hire such amazing talent(37:29) The good and bad of building in public(45:16) Some of the odd teams at The Browser Company and why Josh calls it a prototype-driven culture(46:01) The membership team(48:07) The storytelling team(52:00) Why The Browser Company doesn't have traditional PMs(54:07) A case for adding PMs(57:32) The role of data, even in a company that optimizes for feelings(58:30) Airbnb's Snow White project(1:02:14) How impactful moments in Josh's life influenced values at The Browser Company(1:03:08) How the film General Magic has inspired Josh(1:04:32) The value of novel names(1:06:50) Why The Browser Company's approach works for Arc(1:12:47) Why you need to nail latency and why Josh loves Tupl(1:14:33) The shift to cloud computing and the ultimate vision at The Browser Company(1:23:15) Lightning roundProduction and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com. Get full access to Lenny's Newsletter at www.lennysnewsletter.com/subscribe

Pollen: For Creative Entrepreneurs with Diana Davis
E23 The Power of Community: The Journey of Tia Meyers Grado and Freelancing Females

Pollen: For Creative Entrepreneurs with Diana Davis

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2022 56:37


Five years ago, freelancing was already a growing demographic. The pandemic only boosted freelancer numbers; now, there are more freelancers than ever! We won't sugarcoat it: freelancing can be tough. But we can learn so much from the people who've been where you are now — and succeeded.  Here's where our guest Tia Meyer Grado, and the Freelancing Females can help. In this episode of The Pollen Podcast, Tia, the founder of Freelancing Females, shares how she initially started the group as a resource and support for fellow female freelancers. Over time, the community grew to a point where she decided it could become a business to support freelancers further. She encourages freelancers to get paid what they're worth and finally have the time for themselves!  Listen to this episode and be empowered by Tia's journey and community.    Create your own creative entrepreneurship story of clarity, professional confidence, and profit. Join Diana's 90-day group course Camp Clarity and learn everything you wish you already knew, like how to land dream clients, harness the power of social media, and make the money you deserve. Learn more here.

Reviewin Rebels
fiftythree

Reviewin Rebels

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2022 60:59


just dom and ill on this hour converstaion about and 1 netflix future and more

SUNDAYS! with Madison Barse
The world of Freelance & building one of the World's largest community for female freelancers with Tia Meyers | Freelancing Females

SUNDAYS! with Madison Barse

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2021 17:20


Tia knows what it's like to not get paid - and it turns out she's not the only one. What started as a small group designed to discuss non-payment issues quickly grew into the world's largest community of freelance women. Freelancing Females is now a safe haven for all who identify as women to share their wins, losses, fears, and knowledge in our ever-growing gig, project-based, and freelance economy. Tia's work first started managing events at JetBlue where she learned the ins and outs of client services, large-scale event planning, and the perfect placement of blue streamers. Next, Tia managed a community at tech startup FiftyThree where she grew their Instagram by 450% and managed a community of 25 million artists, creatives, and makers. After working in social media for these brands and others (click here for her full CV if you are really interested) Tia channeled her experience into building Freelancing Females from the ground up in May 2017. Working as a solopreneur with only passionate volunteers and a few freelancers to help her, Tia raised more than $31,000 in a crowdfunding campaign in 13 days and grew the group to 25K members in less than two years. Now Freelancing Females is 51K members strong, all of whom are vetted, active freelancers. Tia keeps a hands-on role in executive leadership of the group, while also consulting for brands, speaking publicly, and offering one-on-one mentorship for the next generation of young women who want to work for themselves. If you want to find Tia, check any dog-friendly Brooklyn coffee shop. She loves to travel, spoil her Affenpoo dog Mango, sample every chai latte available to womankind, and basically just live her best freelance life. Connect with Freelancing Females: Freelancing Females Facebook Group Freelancing Females Instagram: @FreelancingFemales Freelancing Females Website: https://www.freelancingfemales.com/

Hacker News TLDR
[#38] Feb 17, 2021

Hacker News TLDR

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2021 17:45


Clubhouse, Texas, and anti-minimalism. It's a speed round, light on the speed. Links What went wrong with the Texas power grid? Python Pattern Matching Jacquard by Google Clubhouse Bio Generator The designer behind Paper (by FiftyThree) is calling for an end to minimalism

texas clubhouse fiftythree
Sketchnote Army Podcast
Georg Petschnigg - SE08 / EP08

Sketchnote Army Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2020 55:00


In this episode, I talk with Georg Petschnig, founder of Paper for iPad, and General Manager at WeTransfer. Georg talks about his entry into visual thinking, Paper's origin story, and the team's philosophy behind Paper. If you haven't considered Paper before, this discussion will give you insights into why Paper works the way it does.SPONSORED BYThis episode of the Sketchnote Army Podcast is brought to you by Paperlike, a screen protector for the iPad that makes drawing with the Apple Pencil feel like paper. Paperlike's Nanodot technology offers the paper-like friction you want with the clearer screen visibility you need. This new surface even improves drawing precision — and reduces arm fatigue. It's the closest you'll get to paper on a digital screen. Buy yours today!https://paperlike.com/sketchnotearmyRUNNING ORDERIntro: Who is Georg?Paper app in a nutshellA little about WeTransferGeorg's path into visualizationWhat is Paper app meant to do? Breakthrough in thought and notation are intertwinedThe tools in Paper and what they were built forPhilosophy of making Paper do they jobs they want to doThe intentions and constraints built into the Paper appMore voices and more opinions makes for better ideasThe normality of sketching in some culturesThe Paper StorePeople will find ways to make things workShared values and dedicated teams of great apps like PaperNerdy Paper question 1: Where did the Paper background color come from?Nerdy Paper question 2: Does Paper use vectors or bitmaps?Mike's feature request: LayersThe Paper Way of app design to make working more fluidTools3 tipsOutroLINKSGeorg's WebsiteGeorg on TwitterGeorg on LinkedIn WeTransfer WebsitePaper MixPaper StoreCo-Founder Andrew AllenInterview with Andrew AllenTOOLSWhiteboardsSticky NotesMoleskine NotebooksMuji PensiPad Pro Apple PencilPaper by WeTransferFigmaPasteWhimsicalMiroBloomMakeSpsaceCausal3 TIPSDon't be shy: express your point of view and be that leader!Just get started.These aren't paintings, these are sketches — get stuff out.CREDITSProducer: Alec PulianasTheme music: Jon SchiedermayerSUBSCRIBE ON ITUNESYou can subscribe to the podcast through iTunes.SUPPORT THE PODCASTTo support the creation, production and hosting of the Sketchnote Army Podcast, buy one of Mike Rohde's bestselling books. Use code ROHDE40 at Peachpit.com for 40% off!

Banned
Fiftythree

Banned

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2020 1:14


Gabut

gabut fiftythree
STARK NATIVES
EP_FIFTYTHREE_HUmaNSAniTy

STARK NATIVES

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2020 36:41


Omari and Eddie talk about Men’s invasive ways, WAP and the tired conversations around it, the pandemic has exposed how much parents don’t like their children, you can’t teach what you don’t know, the parental pedestal, the disillusion of celebs, your past matters as proof to your growth, and more stuff.

men wap fiftythree
What Works
Technology’s Role in Supporting the Very Human Need to Create

What Works

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2020 11:33


Georg Petschnigg doesn’t think of himself as purely a designer, yet he has spent a career building products like Paper and Paste that helps us all create more beautiful things in the course of our work and fun. “It’s human potential,” says Petschnigg. “It’s always been about augmenting the human and their capabilities.” Where Petschnigg has come at design over the course of his career at Microsoft, at the startup FiftyThree which he co-founded, and now as part of WeTransfer, is from the vantage of point of a trained engineer. “I come from the church of tech,” he says. “I believe in technology from stick to stone, to printing press, to servers in the cloud. Technology is a huge enabler. For me the driving force has always been is technology should enable a richer human experience. “The most important thing it means to be alive is to create. So, supporting people’s creative pursuits, in whatever shape or form they come, is the best application of my engineering training.”

Dream Nation Love
Tia Meyers: Founder of Freelancing Females and Social Media Strategist.

Dream Nation Love

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2019 36:25


Tia Meyers is a Brooklyn, NY based social media strategist and Founder of Freelancing Females. It is the world's largest community of freelance women with a mission to support women in redefining their 9-5. This growing global community of over 100,000 freelancers (diverse in jobs) who gather to share knowledge and discover new ways to freelance. The community offers resources, shares vetted jobs, and offers mentorship. You can find out more at freelancingfemales.com. They're also on social. Tia started out managing events at JetBlue where she was taught the ins and outs of customer service, how to plan dinners for hundreds, and the perfect placement of blue streamers. Tia went on to manage the Community at FiftyThree where she grew their Instagram by 450% and ran a community of 25 million artists, creatives, and makers. On the show we talk about how to get clients, manage and land clients, and attract more of the clients that you desire. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/DreamNation/support

Rocketship.fm
The Brilliance of WeTransfers Brand

Rocketship.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2019 30:32


What would it look like if your company built a boat? Would your customers know what to expect? Launching your first product is punishingly hard. Getting to the second one often even more so, as everything will change: Distribution, brand, product strategy, organization and psychology. Learn about the challenges of growing your product family and how to overcome them.  Georg Petschnigg, Chief Innovation Officer from WeTransfer, and co-founder of FiftyThree, the company behind the popular Paste and Paper applications, will draws from his extensive experiences building award winning products used by millions around the world. Learn how to set up your team and product strategy for success. BIG NEWS We've officially launched the Rocketship Premium Podcast feed! Join today for $5/month or $40 annually, and get access to exclusive bonus shows of Rocketship, previews of new seasons, and an ad free version of every episode of the podcast. Check it out today by clicking here. This episode is brought to you by Logi Analytics, which is offering 5 free reports – from analysts like Gartner and Dresner – to help you navigate the BI landscape. Visit logianalytics.com/rocketship to claim your free reports today. This episode is brought to you by Cloudways. Cloudways is a managed cloud hosting platform that simplifies the hosting experience, Visit Cloudways.com and use the promo code RSCW to get 30% off for 3 months on Cloudways managed cloud hosting platform. This episode is also brought to you by DigitalOcean, the cloud platform that makes it easy for startups to launch high-performance modern apps and websites. Learn more about DigitalOcean and apply for Hatch at do.co/rocketship. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Community Signal
Heather Champ and the Biggest Threats to Great Online Communities

Community Signal

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2019 61:20


A few weeks ago, the Community Signal team was discussing the upcoming schedule for the show and talking about the then recent news that Ravelry had decided to ban any pro-Trump related content. Community guidelines and how we moderate conversations in our respective communities are frequent topics on Community Signal, and it’s also something that we work on everyday as community professionals. If you’re contemplating new community guidelines, revising your existing ones, or debating a tough moderation decision, this episode has some terrific insights from Heather Champ. Sharing stories from her time guiding community at Flickr, Tumblr, and more, it’s most interesting to hear from Heather not about exciting new tools and automations, but instead about how much empowering community members with options, filters, and clear community guidelines can create flourishing spaces for expression. Heather also brings up a very important topic –– the level of vulnerability that community managers face in their jobs and the repercussions of trolling and stalking as we become more deeply embedded in our communities. With Heather’s experience comes deep insights and knowledge, but also a clear message that we need to pay attention to the roles and protections that we’re building for community managers and our communities. Patrick and Heather discuss: Why algorithms can’t replace moderators How Flickr created a safe space for sharing adult content The role that Section 230 plays in fostering healthy conversations for everyone, including community managers Big Quotes Defining clear community guidelines and sticking to them (8:10): “Part of joining a community and in any terms of service, there is a line that [says] we reserve the right to terminate any account for any reason. … A company can decide what is and isn’t appropriate and then have the strength to stand up and say we’re not going to tolerate this behavior because you are as a company what you allow people to post.” –Heather Champ The role of humor in community management (38:52): “As people who are representing the voice of a company or representing trying to talk about these things, where I see things go off the rails is people not understanding that while you can always make fun of yourself or the company as a whole, you can’t use humor to make fun of other people or even other individuals within your company. I love making fun of myself. That’s not a problem. Just be very careful of what might come across like your humor at somebody else’s expense.” –Heather Champ How Section 230 protects those you agree with and those you don’t (47:59):“Section 230 is the same law that protected me when I was 13 years old and started moderating content. It’s the same law that protects me now. [It applies to] big companies, small companies. It’s the thing that says that you can have a space where you can say, ‘This isn’t okay.’ It doesn’t matter what that is. If you want to start a community and you’re a Republican and you want to make it so that no one can say bad things about the president, Section 230 has got your back. You can do that.” –@patrickokeefe On the implications of working in community management (54:41): “Flickr was the best of times and the worst of times. It was absolutely magical, but a lot of what happened there has had a lasting impact. I’m on a [Department of Justice] victims list for extortion because somebody was upset that their account was deleted and they threatened to put my face on pornography and flood it out there. … Subsequently to that, I was at a different company where I insisted on having a persona because I was so completely freaked out by … other issues with harassment and stalking that happened.” –Heather Champ About Heather Champ Heather Champ built her first homepage in 1994 and has worked online ever since. Joining Flickrimmediately after the acquisition by Yahoo in 2005, she cowrote Flickr’s community guidelines, which became a template for best practices around the web.  Heather has led community teams at Flickr, Findery, and FiftyThree and consulted with Tumblr, Etsy, and VSCO. Enamored with photography, she created The Mirror Project (1999–2005), a website that celebrated self-portraiture well before “selfies” were a thing, and cofounded JPG Magazine, the photography magazine made by its community. She lives outside of Portland on two acres with her husband and continues to learn new things about communities from their dogs, goats, chickens, and turkeys. Related Links Heather Champ on Instagram Flickr The Mirror Project JPG Magazine Facebook’s $5 billion FTC fine is an embarrassing joke Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act Twitter’s rules Derek Powazek on Community Signal The Right Way to Build an Online Community: 3 Rules From Investor and Flickr Cofounder Caterina Fake Ravelry bans Trump support: why a popular knitting website’s anti-Trump stanceis so significant Milk Barn Farm Tumblr Tom Coates’ take on Flickr #RollFilmWeek Flickr’s safe, moderate, and restricted content definitions DARPA (the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) Flickr’s community guidelines, which Heather co-wrote with George Oates David Greene, senior staff attorney and civil liberties director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, on Community Signal WeTransfer, where Heather currently works Senator Ron Wyden, Christopher Cox, and Senator Ed Markey The Telecommunications Act of 1996 SESTA and FOSTA Transcript View transcript on our website Your Thoughts If you have any thoughts on this episode that you’d like to share, please leave me a comment, send me an email or a tweet. If you enjoy the show, we would be so grateful if you spread the word and supported Community Signal on Patreon.

Sketchnote Army Podcast
IPad Pro Panel - SE06 / EP08

Sketchnote Army Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2019 79:05


In this iPad-focused episode, Michael Clayton, Rob Dimeo, Mauro Tosseli and Steve Silbert join Mike Rohde to discuss all things iPad Pro including the recent Apple announcements at WWDC. If you are on the fence about an iPad or iPad Pro, or aren’t sure which to buy for sketchnoting, this is the episode for you! RUNNING ORDER * Intro * Rohde & Clayton talk about recent Apple announcements and new iPad options * Panel introductions * iPad hardware * Apple Pencil 2 - double-tapping and slippery feel * iPad sketchnoting software * Accessories LINKS * Michael Clayton - https://mobile.twitter.com/ProfClayton * Rob Dimeo - https://mobile.twitter.com/Rob_Dimeo * Steve Silbert - https://twitter.com/SteveSilbert * Mauro Tosseli - https://mobile.twitter.com/xLontrax * iPad Air - https://www.apple.com/ipad-air/ * iPad mini - https://www.apple.com/ipad-mini/ * iPadOS - https://www.apple.com/ipados/ipados-preview/ * iPad 9.7 - https://www.apple.com/ipad-9.7/ * iPad Pro - https://www.apple.com/ipad-pro/ * Apple Pencil 2 - https://www.apple.com/apple-pencil/ * Logitech Crayon - https://www.logitech.com/en-us/product/grab-a-crayon * Logitech Slim Folio Case - https://www.logitech.com/en-us/product/slim-folio-ipad-keyboard-case * Procreate - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id425073498 * Paper by WeTransfer (formerly FiftyThree) - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id506003812 * Sketchbook Pro - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id883738213 * Tawe - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id993448214 * Samsung Galaxy Note Pro - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung_Galaxy_Note_Pro_12.2 * Adobe Illustrator Draw - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id911156590 * Astropad Standard - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id934510730 * Astropad studio - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id1181582576 * Workvisual - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id988018129 * Holger Nils Pohl - https://mobile.twitter.com/holgernilspohl * Flipaclip - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id1101848914 * Noteshelf - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id1271086060 * Concepts - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id560586497 * Liquid Text - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id922765270 * Unibal Signo - https://uniballco.com/brand/signo/ * Illumashield Matte Screen Cover 9.7” iPad Pro - https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01BTDEZBQ/ * iCarez Matte Screen Cover 11” iPad Pro - https://www.amazon.com/iCarez-Updated-Anti-Glare-Protector-Compatible/dp/B07GZMMYHT/ * USB C to HDMI VGA Audio Adapter by AOKEN - https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07LCZW5K2/ * USB C to Audio Adaptor - https://www.amazon.com/Digital-Adapter-Converter-Support-Control/dp/B07BGXS2M2/ * BelKin Stage Pro app - https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id714477455 * Belkin Tablet Stage Stand (B2B054) - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CF7M7RA * Siig Full Motion Easy, Adjust Universal Tablet, Desk Mount (CE-MT1X12-S1) - https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00YT6QZSC/ * Diana Meier-Soriat - https://mobile.twitter.com/DianaSoriat * Apple Smart Folio - https://www.apple.com/shop/product/MRXE2/smart-folio-for-129-inch-ipad-pro-3rd-generation-white * Apple Smart Keyboard - https://www.apple.com/smart-keyboard/ CREDITS * Producer: Jon Schiedermayer * Show Notes: Chris Wilson SUPPORT THE PODCAST To support the creation, production and hosting of the Sketchnote Army and Sketchnote Army Podcast, buy one of Mike Rohde’s books and use code ROHDE40 at Peachpit.com for 40% off! http://rohdesign.com/handbook/ http://rohdesign.com/workbook/ PAST PODCAST SEASONS * Season 1 * https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-se1 * Season 2 * https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-se2 * Season 3 * https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-se3 * Season 4 * https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-se4 * Season 5 * https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-se5

apple panel ipads concepts wwdc ipad pro ipados apple pencil procreate michael clayton wetransfer peach pit mike rohde fiftythree astropad noteshelf logitech crayon sketchnote army sketchbook pro apple smart keyboard tawe adobe illustrator draw
Sketchnote Army Podcast
Chris Spalton - SE06 / EP01

Sketchnote Army Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2019 64:11


In this first episode of season 6, Mike talks with UX designer and sketchnoter Chris Spalton from England about his entry into sketchnoting and how he's using sketchnotes, comics, and other visualizations in his work in user experience. We also talk about Chris' labor of love graphic novel, The Eelman Chronicles. RUNNING ORDER Intro - Chris's sketchnote origin story Chris's path to UX design storytelling, Comic books and Story boards in business The story of Eelman Tools 3 Tips Outro 3 TIPS Share as early as possible! Know that you are creative (it just might be different than you think) Use a grey marker to add drop shadows Tools Steadlter Fineliners - https://www.staedtler.com/intl/en/products/Products-for-colouring/fineliners/ Promarkers - http://www.winsornewton.com/row/shop/graphic-markers/promarker Faber-Castell Brush Pens - https://www.faber-castell.com/products/art-and-graphic/pitt-artist-pens Sharpies - https://www.sharpie.com/ Post it notes - https://www.post-it.com/3M/en_US/post-it/ iPad Pro - https://www.apple.com/shop/buy-ipad/ipad-pro Apple Pencil - https://www.apple.com/lae/apple-pencil/ Paper by WeTransfer (formerly FiftyThree) - https://paper.bywetransfer.com/ Procreate - http://procreate.art/ Caran d'ache Non-Photo P{encil - https://www.jetpens.com/Caran-d-Ache-Sketcher-Non-Photo-Blue-Pencil-Pack-of-2/pd/15882 LINKS Chris Spalton on Twitter - https://twitter.com/chrisspalton The Eelman Chronicles - https://gumroad.com/cspalton Redgate Software - https://www.red-gate.com User Experience - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_experience_design Sunni Brown - http://sunnibrown.com Dan Roam - https://www.danroam.com Foolproof Design - https://www.foolproof.co.uk Chris' Medium article on comic strips and storyboards for UX concepting - https://uxplanet.org/using-comic-strips-and-storyboards-to-test-your-ux-concepts-cccad7ac7f71 The Fens - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fens CREDITS Producer: Jon Schiedermayer Show Notes: Chris Wilson SUPPORT THE PODCAST To support the creation, production and hosting of the Sketchnote Army and Sketchnote Army Podcast, buy one of Mike Rohde's books and use code ROHDE40 at Peachpit.com for 40% off! http://rohdesign.com/handbook/ http://rohdesign.com/workbook/ PAST PODCAST SEASONS Season 1 - https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-se1 Season 2 - https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-se2 Season 3 - https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-se3 Season 4 - https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-se4 Season 5 - https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-se5

Applelianos
4x51 Appwars Aplicaciones Recomendadas

Applelianos

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2018 31:28


Como siempre otro martes más que os traemos nuevas aplicaciones para que probéis en vuestro iPhone,iPad, macOS o Apple Watch. Hoy venimos con unas aplicaciones muy curiosas y que te puede servir para tu día a día , deberías probar alguna te lo recomendamos que lo hagas. Si tienes apps que le puede servir a alguien compártelas con nosotros para comentarlas en el episodio de appwars. ya sabéis como nos pueden ayudar, compartiendo el podcast y dejando vuestro like.   • ‎ ‎PhotoX Pro Top Live Wallpapers• ‎Perder grasa abdominal FitBot• ‎IM+ Instant Messenger• ‎Paper de FiftyThree     // Síguenos en Twitter • Applelianos     // Telegram Applelianos • Applelianos (Oficial)     Si queréis recibir notificación en tiempo real de nuestros directos tenéis que descargar esta app   Si has disfrutado de este episodio, no olvides darnos una reseña en iTunes

Applelianos
4x51 Appwars Aplicaciones Recomendadas

Applelianos

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2018 31:28


Como siempre otro martes más que os traemos nuevas aplicaciones para que probéis en vuestro iPhone,iPad, macOS o Apple Watch. Hoy venimos con unas aplicaciones muy curiosas y que te puede servir para tu día a día , deberías probar alguna te lo recomendamos que lo hagas. Si tienes apps que le puede servir a alguien compártelas con nosotros para comentarlas en el episodio de appwars. ya sabéis como nos pueden ayudar, compartiendo el podcast y dejando vuestro like.   • ? ?PhotoX Pro Top Live Wallpapers• ?Perder grasa abdominal FitBot• ?IM+ Instant Messenger• ?Paper de FiftyThree     // Síguenos en Twitter • Applelianos     // Telegram Applelianos • Applelianos (Oficial)     Si queréis recibir notificación en tiempo real de nuestros directos tenéis que descargar esta app   Si has disfrutado de este episodio, no olvides darnos una reseña en iTunes

WIRED Business – Spoken Edition
FiftyThree, Maker of Popular Paper and Paste Apps, Gets Acquired

WIRED Business – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2018 11:39


Back in 2012, a Seattle-based startup named FiftyThree launched a drawing app designed for iPad, with a name that sounded like it was designed specifically for an Apple crowd: Paper. Despite its simplicity and also because of it, Apple crowned the iPad App of the Year. Tech writers described it as “the next great iPad app”, “a superbly designed sketching app,” and “a fresh canvas ready and waiting for your ideas, inspiration, and art.

work.flow - med Anders Høeg Nissen
Episode 32: Håndtegnede nyhedsbreve om livets store spørgsmål

work.flow - med Anders Høeg Nissen

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2017 67:22


Jeg hørte først om Mathias i en artikel, der nævnte hans håndtegnede nyhedsbreve, og da jeg så tjekkede hans site, Think Clearly, blev det hurtigt tydeligt, at han har gang i en masse spændende projekter - og derfor er et oplagt offer for work.flow :-) I episoden her fortæller Mathias om baggrunden for nyhedsbrevene, forskellen på at skrive i hånden og bruge fx en iPad, og hvordan proces og værktøjer hænger uløseligt sammen. Udover nyhedsbrevene laver Mathias også en slags spillekort til personlig udvikling og strategi-arbejde, og har også for nylig lanceret en podcast. Links Think Clearly Håndtegnede nyhedsbreve Card Decks med inspirations-spørgsmål (incl. pdf download) Link til Mathias’ podcast MS Office Lens-appen FiftyThree - laver Paper og Pencil til iPad Dave Gray - der var med til at sætte gang i Mathias’ Card Decks - har bla firmaet XPLANE SpørgeJørgen på 24syv var inspiration for Mathias Sennheiser HD 25 er Mathias’ foretrukne hovedtelefoner Mathias optager sin podcast på en Zoom H2N og bruger iZotope RX6 til filtrering De tre tips Accelerere alting i sine læringsprocesser og værdsætte hvor hurtigt man kan lære, snarere end at jage perfektionen fra begyndelsen. Drop det med at ting skal være balance - find i stedet en rytme, hvor tingene svinger frem og tilbage, fx mellem hyperproduktivitet og ro. Huske at stille spørgsmålet ‘hvorfor’ - også selvom du måske ikke kender hele svaret. Hvad er formålet med det du laver - og hvad er din motivation?

Wizardest
E17 // “The Evolution of Presentation” Georg Petschnigg, Co-Founder and CEO at FiftyThree

Wizardest

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2017 89:55


Founded by former Microsoft engineers and designers, FiftyThree is the creator of the award-winning app Paper and their latest release, Paste, is taking on the holy grail of productivity tools: presentations. As an early proponent of iPad as a device for creating, Georg talks about the journey he’s taken at FiftyThree, design vs. engineering, auto-layouts, the economics of the App Store, and drawing inspiration from dance.

Sketchnote Army Podcast
Steve Silbert - SE04 / EP04

Sketchnote Army Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2017 77:11


Steve Silbert is an agile coach and an avid sketchnoter. In this episode Mike and Steve discuss how Steve uses sketchnotes to help facilitate discussions, collaboration and understanding. In the second half of the episode Steve discusses his use of sketchnoting with his religious observances and spiritual reflections. Finally, Steve shares his favorite tools and tips for sketchnoting. 
SPONSORED BY
 Sketchnote Icons T-Shirts and Hoodies! ONLY available at Cotton Bureau and ONLY through December 3rd! Choose Vintage Purple, Indigo or Espresso, or a warm, gray zip hoodie! Don't miss this chance to order your Sketchnote Icon gear! 
http://cottonbureau.com/products/sketchnote-icons/
 RUNNING ORDER Intro Steve Silbert's Origin Story Steve's Work with Agile Features that Sketchnotes and Agile Share Collaborative sketching with teams Sketchnote Selfies Collaborating with a Sketchnoting a presentation Sketchnotes and planning talks/presentations Sketchnoting live Sketchnoting the Torah Sketchnoting during Passover and religious observances Sketchnote Thanksgiving? TOOLS Bubm cable case used as a pencil case - https://www.amazon.com/BUBM-Electronics-Accessories-Lightweight-Large-Black/dp/B00OZN8GL8 Chisle point Sharpies - http://www.sharpie.com/sharpie/chisel/SHChiselTurquoiseChisel.html Brush Stroke Sharpies - http://www.sharpie.com/sharpie/brush-tip/SHBrushTipBerryBrush.html#cgid=art&start=4 Fine Tip Neuland Markers - https://eu.neuland.com/markers-more/neuland-markers/fineone-by-neuland-artmarker-brush-nib-single-colours.html Moleskine Notebook Dot Grid - https://us.moleskine.com/classic-notebook-black/p0460 Prismacolor Pens - https://www.prismacolor.com/markers/   Pentel Model 8 - https://www.amazon.com/Pentel-Automatic-Pencil-Assorted-PH158/dp/B001PMJZ3K Pacsafe Intasafe Z250 Anti-Theft Travel Bag, Steve's sketchnoting bag - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00MOF6G48/ iPad Pro 10.5 - https://www.apple.com/ipad-pro/ Apple Pencil (x2) - https://www.apple.com/apple-pencil/ Procreate for detailed sketchnoting - https://procreate.art/ Paper by FiftyThree for notes- http://fiftythree.com Canva - http://canva.com Tawe - http://www.tawe.co/ Tangle Patterns - https://tanglepatternsgalore.wordpress.com/home/ ISKN with imagink apps - https://www.iskn.co/ TIPS Learn to listen Don't be afraid to fail Don't overthink it LINKS Steve on twitter - https://twitter.com/@stevesilbert Steve's website - http://www.stevesilbert.com/ Steve's sketchnote on the sketchnote army - http://sketchnotearmy.com/blog/2017/6/20/world-of-tanks-by-steve-silbert-stevesilbert.html Agile - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agile_software_development Trello - https://trello.com Mike's Mini Workshop - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39Xq4tSQ31A Torah Portion - http://torahportions.org/thisweek/ Passover Seder - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passover_Seder Marianne Rady - https://twitter.com/MarianneRady PAST PODCAST SEASON LINKS Season 1 - https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-season Season 2 - https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast Season 3 - https://soundcloud.com/sketchnote-army-podcast/sets/sketchnote-army-podcast-1
 Special thanks to Christopher Wilson for the show notes - @mrchrisjwilson https://twitter.com/mrchrisjwilson

Sketchnote Army Podcast
Katharina Theis-Bröhl - SE03 / EP04

Sketchnote Army Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2017 35:56


Katharina Theis-Bröhl is a physicist who loves to sketchnote scientific ideas, like solar energy, as well was a passion for teaching others to sketchnote. A colleague and friend of Rob Dimeo, she shares her experiences finding sketchnotes, using digital and analog tools and her 3 tips for sketchnoters. SPONSORED BY The Sketchnote Army Clothing Collection! A variety of t-shirts and sweatshirts available for sale at Teespring that support Sketchnote Army and look fashionable at the same time! http://sketchnotearmy.com/t-shirts SHOW NOTES Katharina on Twitter - https://twitter.com/theiskbt Katharina on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/ktb_visual/ Katharina on Flickr - http://flickr.com/photos/theiskbt NIST - http://www.nist.gov/index.html Rob Dimeo - https://twitter.com/Rob_Dimeo Rob's Sketchnote of Katharina's Paper - https://www.flickr.com/photos/dimeophotos/19205184679/ Solar Power Sketchnotes - https://www.flickr.com/photos/theiskbt/albums/72157666790607564 A. R. Penck Art - https://www.google.com/search?q=penck#q=ar+penck+art Paper by FiftyThree - https://www.fiftythree.com/paper Procreate - http://procreate.si Ecoline Brushes - https://www.royaltalens.com/brands/talens/graphic-art-products/ecoline-liquid-water-colour/ecoline-brush-pen/ Moleskine Pocket Dot Grid Notebook - https://www.amazon.com/Moleskine-Classic-Notebook-Pocket-Dotted/dp/B015NG45CO/therohdesignwebs Leuchtturm1917 A6 Dot Grid Notebook - https://www.amazon.com/Leuchtturm1917-Notebook-Pocket-Softcover-Squared/dp/B003EVMMZS/therohdesignwebs Midori Traveler's Notebook - http://www.travelers-notebook.com Fauxdori Notebooks - http://www.tortagialla.com/2015/05/13/make-your-own-midori-fauxdori-travelers-notebook/ Icon & Sketchnote Challenges - https://gumroad.com/snchallenge KATHARINA'S 3 TIPS Take part in challenges to learn more and get better. Don't stress yourself out! Keep it fun! Publish your work for the community!

Beetlejuice Minute Podcast
Minute Fiftythree: Saved by the Belafonte!

Beetlejuice Minute Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2016 11:00


One of the most iconic scenes of the movie kicks off in this minute. (Guest commentator, Chris Taylor.) Link to the Inkspots song which would have resulted in a completely different scene. https://youtu.be/jtLWUFm4NMg   --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Sketchnote Army Podcast
Eva-Lotta Lamm - SE02 / EP03

Sketchnote Army Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2016 72:49


In this episode, I chat with the amazing Eva-Lotta Lamm, a designer, sketchnoter and a really brilliant person, who traveled the world and captured the experiences she had as sketchnotes. We also talk about tools, iPad Pro and Eva-Lotta shares 3 tips for improving your sketchnoting practice. SPONSORED BY The Sketchnote Army Clothing Collection! A variety of t-shirts and sweatshirts available for sale at Teespring that support Sketchnote Army and look fashionable at the same time! http://sketchnotearmy.com/t-shirts SHOW NOTES Eva-Lotta's Website - http://www.sketchnotesbook.com Twitter - https://twitter.com/evalottchen Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/evalottchen/ Flickr - https://www.flickr.com/photos/evalottchen/ Secrets from the road: reliving our world trip in sketchnotes - https://secretsfromtheroad.com/ Secrets from the road (Facebook) - https://www.facebook.com/secretsfromtheroad/ Notes from the Road - https://www.flickr.com/photos/evalottchen/albums/72157648014035569 Eva-Lotta's favorite pens - http://www.sketchnotesbook.com/blog/2013/2/19/f7jvg6pebvlzb433lho8uplf8z5e3i Apple iPad Pro - www.apple.com/ipad-pro/ Apple Pencil - www.apple.com/apple-pencil/ Paper by FiftyThree - https://www.fiftythree.com Procreate App for iPad - procreate.si/ Thoughts About Sketching Practice - https://medium.com/@evalottchen/thoughts-about-sketching-practice-53454ef9cb19 Drawn together through Visual Practice, an anthology featuring an article about Visual Improvisation by Eva-Lotta - https://visualpracticebook.com/

secrets ipads ipad pro flickr teespring apple pencil fiftythree eva lotta sketchnote army eva lotta lamm
Sketchnote Army Podcast
Todd Clarke - SE02 / EP02

Sketchnote Army Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2016 51:46


In the second episode of season two, I talk with Todd Clarke, whose business, technology and agile / lean background helps him use visuals and sketchnotes to summarize ideas to improve people's understanding. SHOW NOTES Visual One Pagers - http://visualonepagers.com Austin Kleon - http://austinkleon.com Uniball Air - https://www.amazon.com/uni-ball-Rollerball-12-Pack-Black-1927631/dp/B00UHJDOX4/therohdesignwebs Tornado Pencil - https://www.amazon.com/Retro-51-Tornado-Pencil-Stealth/dp/B001VDX9C6/therohdesignwebs Moleskine Pocket Sketchbook - https://www.amazon.com/Moleskine-Sketchbook-Pocket-Classic-Notebooks/dp/8883701054/therohdesignwebs Apple iPad Pro - www.apple.com/ipad-pro/ Apple Pencil - www.apple.com/apple-pencil/ Paper by FiftyThree - https://www.fiftythree.com iLLumiShield iPad Pro 9.7" Screen Protector (Matte) Film - https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01BTDEZBQ/therohdesignwebs Pencil by FiftyThree - https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00JP12170/therohdesignwebs Sketchbook Pro - http://www.autodesk.com/products/sketchbook-pro/overview Procreate App for iPad - procreate.si/ Concepts Pro - http://concepts.tophatch.com The Noun Project - http://thenounproject.com Todd Clarke - https://twitter.com/toddaclarke Todd on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/toddaclarke

Sketchnote Army Podcast
Catharine Mi-Sook - SE01 / EP05

Sketchnote Army Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2016 58:09


In the fifth episode of the Sketchnote Army Podcast, I talk to Catharine Mi-Sook, who is new to sketchnoting and loves Japanese papers and pens. She offers a fresh perspective on sketchnoting and the sketchnoting community. Show notes Todays Doodle Community - https://twitter.com/search?q=%23TodaysDoodle&src=typd Hobonichi Techo - http://www.1101.com/store/techo/2016/planner/index.html Bullet Journal- http://bulletjournal.com Quotebook - http://quotebookapp.com Nitoms Stalogy - http://global.rakuten.com/en/store/knox/item/89940718/ Kerataki - https://kuretakezig.us JetPens - http://jetpens.com JetOPens Video Tutorials - https://www.youtube.com/user/JetPens Rohdesign Dispatch - http://rohdesign.com/newsletter/ Platinum Carbon Ink - http://www.jetpens.com/Platinum-Carbon-Ink-Black-60-ml-Bottle/pd/3461 Copic Markers - https://imaginationinternationalinc.com/copic/ Paper Mate Flair Pens - https://www.amazon.com/Paper-Mate-Porous-Point-12-Pack-74423/dp/B000J09CO6/therohdesignwebs Baron Fig Squire - http://www.baronfig.com/pages/squire Aurora Fountain Pens - http://www.nibs.com/Auroramainpage.htm Delta Fountain Pens - http://www.deltapen.it Petrolicious - http://petrolicious.com Digital Tools Paper by FiftyThree - https://www.fiftythree.com/ Concepts - http://concepts.tophatch.com Diaries Surprised by a Diary - http://rohdesign.com/weblog/2004/9/19/surprised-by-a-diary.html Social Media Links Instagram - http://www.instagram.com/catharinemisook Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/catharinemisook

Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast
5 Minute Tech Tasks for Getting — and STAYING — Organized!

Taking Control: The ADHD Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2016 22:51


Do you find yourself sitting at your computer waiting for that next call? How about standing in line waiting for the next teller? Wherever you are, if you have five minutes and one of your devices, you can work on your digital organization. This week on the show, a sampler of activities and resources for you to use in those small windows and tiny breaks to keep your digital life straight.  Plus, follow up and a listener question from our organizing show with another take on decision-making.  Links & Notes Alto’s Adventure Hazel File Juggler Lumosity Pencil by FiftyThree

Adventures in Angular
078 AiA NG Beta with Brad Green, Miško Hevery, and Igor Minar

Adventures in Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2016 75:50


Check out Freelance Remote Conf! And while you’re there take a look at all of this year’s conferences!   02:42 - Angular 2 Beta and Projected Release Talk ng-conf ?? 06:52 - Payload Size 07:56 - Preparing For Angular 2 13:31 - Application Capability 17:06 - Language Dart TypeScript 17:33 - Releasing Angular 1 vs 2 Syntax New A2 Syntax Tooling 27:10 - angular-cli 28:31 - The Designer Story Inline Templates UI Components 34:57 - Promises and Observables 40:55 - The Router Lazy Loading 48:43 - Angular 2 Myths: Busted 53:22 - React, React Native Telerik NativeScript React Native Radio 55:37 - Angular Guidance; OO-Style or Functional App Architecture? Victor Savkin’s Blog Made with Angular 01:01:19 - Angular 1 => 2 Migration ng-upgrade ng-forward 01:04:17 - The Angular Community and Upcoming Conferences and Announcements Jules Kremer That Conference Picks a2-in-memory-web-api (John) John Papa’s Upcoming Angular 2 Pluralsight Course (John) Julia Gillard (Ward) Bryce Canyon National Park (Joe) Stockpile (Joe) ngrx (Lukas) The Revenant (Brian) ServiceWorker: Revolution of the Web Platform (Brian) The Architecture of Open Source Applications (Igor) iPad Pro (Igor) Apple Pencil (Igor) Paper & Pencil by FiftyThree (Igor) Mandy Moore (Chuck) Federico Iachetti (Chuck)

blog language promises architecture ward beta migration react igor dart pencil ipad pro revenant mandy moore angular router apple pencil syntax typescript tooling myths busted stockpile julia gillard react native bryce canyon national park brad green web platform john papa observables telerik nativescript fiftythree lazy loading that conference upcoming conferences react native radio hevery open source applications victor savkin igor minar freelance remote conf jules kremer angular community ngupgraders inline templates
Systematic
156: One Time At Band Practice with Glenn Chipman

Systematic

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2016 70:59


Brett chats with Art Director Glenn Chipman about brainstorming, cartooning, trials, tribulations, and high school bands. Brought to you by Smile and PDFpen 7: everything you need to annotate, edit, OCR, and more. Check it out at smilesoftware.com/systematic. Show Notes Glenn Chipman @glennchipman Glenn on Facebook Top 3 picks Glenn: iPad Pro Jot stylus Paper by FiftyThree, Pencil by FiftyThree Astropad Born Standing Up: A Comic's Life Brett: Skinny Legs and All — Tom Robbins Still Life With Woodpecker Douglas Adams Linkpack Interact

Devchat.tv Master Feed
078 AiA NG Beta with Brad Green, Miško Hevery, and Igor Minar

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2016 75:50


Check out Freelance Remote Conf! And while you’re there take a look at all of this year’s conferences!   02:42 - Angular 2 Beta and Projected Release Talk ng-conf ?? 06:52 - Payload Size 07:56 - Preparing For Angular 2 13:31 - Application Capability 17:06 - Language Dart TypeScript 17:33 - Releasing Angular 1 vs 2 Syntax New A2 Syntax Tooling 27:10 - angular-cli 28:31 - The Designer Story Inline Templates UI Components 34:57 - Promises and Observables 40:55 - The Router Lazy Loading 48:43 - Angular 2 Myths: Busted 53:22 - React, React Native Telerik NativeScript React Native Radio 55:37 - Angular Guidance; OO-Style or Functional App Architecture? Victor Savkin’s Blog Made with Angular 01:01:19 - Angular 1 => 2 Migration ng-upgrade ng-forward 01:04:17 - The Angular Community and Upcoming Conferences and Announcements Jules Kremer That Conference Picks a2-in-memory-web-api (John) John Papa’s Upcoming Angular 2 Pluralsight Course (John) Julia Gillard (Ward) Bryce Canyon National Park (Joe) Stockpile (Joe) ngrx (Lukas) The Revenant (Brian) ServiceWorker: Revolution of the Web Platform (Brian) The Architecture of Open Source Applications (Igor) iPad Pro (Igor) Apple Pencil (Igor) Paper & Pencil by FiftyThree (Igor) Mandy Moore (Chuck) Federico Iachetti (Chuck)

blog language promises architecture ward beta migration react igor dart pencil ipad pro revenant mandy moore angular router apple pencil syntax typescript tooling myths busted stockpile julia gillard react native bryce canyon national park brad green web platform john papa observables telerik nativescript fiftythree lazy loading that conference upcoming conferences react native radio hevery open source applications victor savkin igor minar freelance remote conf jules kremer angular community ngupgraders inline templates
All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
078 AiA NG Beta with Brad Green, Miško Hevery, and Igor Minar

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2016 75:50


Check out Freelance Remote Conf! And while you’re there take a look at all of this year’s conferences!   02:42 - Angular 2 Beta and Projected Release Talk ng-conf ?? 06:52 - Payload Size 07:56 - Preparing For Angular 2 13:31 - Application Capability 17:06 - Language Dart TypeScript 17:33 - Releasing Angular 1 vs 2 Syntax New A2 Syntax Tooling 27:10 - angular-cli 28:31 - The Designer Story Inline Templates UI Components 34:57 - Promises and Observables 40:55 - The Router Lazy Loading 48:43 - Angular 2 Myths: Busted 53:22 - React, React Native Telerik NativeScript React Native Radio 55:37 - Angular Guidance; OO-Style or Functional App Architecture? Victor Savkin’s Blog Made with Angular 01:01:19 - Angular 1 => 2 Migration ng-upgrade ng-forward 01:04:17 - The Angular Community and Upcoming Conferences and Announcements Jules Kremer That Conference Picks a2-in-memory-web-api (John) John Papa’s Upcoming Angular 2 Pluralsight Course (John) Julia Gillard (Ward) Bryce Canyon National Park (Joe) Stockpile (Joe) ngrx (Lukas) The Revenant (Brian) ServiceWorker: Revolution of the Web Platform (Brian) The Architecture of Open Source Applications (Igor) iPad Pro (Igor) Apple Pencil (Igor) Paper & Pencil by FiftyThree (Igor) Mandy Moore (Chuck) Federico Iachetti (Chuck)

blog language promises architecture ward beta migration react igor dart pencil ipad pro revenant mandy moore angular router apple pencil syntax typescript tooling myths busted stockpile julia gillard react native bryce canyon national park brad green web platform john papa observables telerik nativescript fiftythree lazy loading that conference upcoming conferences react native radio hevery open source applications victor savkin igor minar freelance remote conf jules kremer angular community ngupgraders inline templates
The Wired Educator Podcast
WEP 0020: Digital Literary An Interview with Don Goble

The Wired Educator Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2016 53:27


In this episode of the Wired Educator Podcast, Kelly interviews Don Goble about media literacy. Making movies and getting creative with sound, images, and movies can impact anyclassroom and every classroom. This is a wonderful interview with an amazing educator. Don Goble is an award-winning Multimedia Instructor at Ladue Horton Watkins High School in St. Louis, Missouri. The National Journalism Education Association named Don as their Broadcast Adviser of the Year 2015. Don speaks internationally at conferences, conventions, and professional development workshops offering educators innovative ways to incorporate video and media literacy into the classroom. Don was a part of the 2011 Apple Distinguished Educator class. Connect with Don on Twitter @dgoble2001. Celebrate your students work. Publish your students work. Mentioned in this interview: Don Goble's publications in the iTunes store can be viewed here.  Visit Don Goble's classroom website by clicking here. Click here to visit Don Goble's professional website. Here is the link to the article Don mentions about how the NYTimes Video team reported the terrorist attack. A link to JEA National Broadcast Adviser of the Year Also mentioned in this interview:  Audio Technica USB 2100 Microphone iOgrapher Filmaking Case for iPhone iOgrapher Filmaking Case for iPad iPadPalooza Don's favorite app: Touchcast App Don's most-influential book: Pure Genius by Don Wettrick SchoolTube for sharing videoes with students SoundCloud Periscope Paper by FiftyThree    

Rebuild
125: Toothbrush Can Be Exciting (N, naan)

Rebuild

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2016 62:04


Naoki Hiroshima さん、Kazuho Okui さんをゲストに迎えて、英語、Twitter For Mac, iPad Pro, 451, Android Java, Swift, PHP, Perl 6 などについて話しました。 Show Notes Rebuild: Supporter サポーター向けのスペシャルエピソードを配信しました! #rebuildfm Rebuild: 121: Ruby Is Not Dying, Not Yet (Laurent Sansonetti) エンジニアが0から英語を勉強する為にした事 Twitter’s updated Mac app wasn’t made by Twitter Echofon for Twitter on the Mac App Store この前香港で買ったiPhoneがSIM読み込まない』と相談しに持って来たiPhone6sPlusがコチラ! KeyboardAccessory Xcode for iPad Pro | Apple Developer Forums John Gruber (@gruber) Advanced Touch Input on iOS Paper & Pencil by FiftyThree Adobe Photoshop Sketch Why 451? 華氏451度〔新訳版〕| レイ・ブラッドベリ Amazon.com: The Man In The High Castle - Season 1 Twitter Transparency Report Google confirms next Android version will use Oracle's open-source OpenJDK Apache Harmony - Open Source Java Platform Java SE | Oracle Technology Network Mysterious Android codebase commit Java Lambda Expressions SwiftAndroid PHPの生みの親,ラスマス・ラードフ氏インタビュー PHP is as exciting as your toothbrush Christmas is here. | Perl 6 Advent Calendar Rakudo Perl 6

More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice

This week we continue deliberations on the iPad Pro and is this the right time for another iPad? Once again we discuss "Premium" app pricing and the reactive to Jaime's recent tweet. We discuss the Apple TV Developer Kit. We talk about Lyft's all Swift app. We discuss transitioning apps under iOS 9 which shipped this past week. Picks: Peace, Paper for iPhone and Hand Prix. Episode 57 Show Notes: iPad Pro Pencil by 53 We need sketch for the iPad Pro! Apple TV Developer Kit Jaime's $4.99 tweet Crystal - Block Ads Browse Faster Lyft Cocoa Programming for OS X - The Big Nerd Ranch Guide Top Tips for iOS 9 Development Mastering Auto Layout - Justin Williams Mortal Pongbat App Store Games Battle Chess Beyond Dark Castle Episode 57 Picks: Peace by Marco Arment (Marco Arment has removed the app from the App Store.) Paper - Notes, Photo Annotation, and Sketches by FiftyThree by FiftyThree, Inc Hand Prix

Rally The Horde
RtH FiftyThree

Rally The Horde

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2015 72:43


fiftythree
Der Übercast
#UC030: 10 Jahre Übercast

Der Übercast

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2015 68:53


Vor 10 Jahren ist die erste Folge Der Übercast gestartet. Heute reden Sven, Patrick und Andreas über sich selbst, die Show und was hinter dem Vorhang passiert. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. WICHTIG! Wie immer gibt’s das Geschwafel auch mit Bild auf dem YouTube. Überbleibsel CloudApp Pro Lite ist leider zum heulen Bei StackSocial hatte Patrick vor ein paar Monaten einen Deal abgegriffen und somit für schlappe $39 sein CloudApp aufgebohrt. StackSocial Beschreibung der Lifetime Subscription Lebenslänglich glücklich und mit Pro Features versorgt ist er nun aber nicht mehr. Zwar hat er sein Logo reingehauen und noch auf das dunkle Theme umgeschwenkt, aber ändern kann er das nun nicht mehr… alles ist ausgegraut. Festzuhalten bleibt wie letztens schon besprochen, dass CloudApp nur noch 10 kostenlose Drops pro Monat macht. Der Konkurrent Droplr hat auch was neu gemacht… er bietet unendlich viele Drops in der kostenlosen Variante, aber die werden nach 7 Tagen gelöscht. Kurz, die Zeit der Selbstversorgung mit Dropshare ist angebrochen – eh eine super App und mehr darüber könnt ihr in unserer Episode mit dem Entwickler Timo Josten nachhören. Cloud Gallery Cloud Gallery – Photo Manager für Dropbox, Google Drive, Facebook und Flickr Als Überbleibsel zu unserem zweitem Flug bzw. noch präziser gesagt als Follow-Up zu Unbound lässt nun Andreas seinem Unmut freien Lauf. Die letzten ernsthafteren Updates für iOS und den Mac hat die App vor über 5 Monaten gesehen. Andreas stört nach wie vor, dass man nur einen Ordner mit Bildern angeben kann. Cloud Gallery ist da die Erlösung für ihn. Patrick gefällt’s nicht vom Look her und Sven ist bedient mit Carousel. Jawbone UP3 Downvoted by @simplicitybliss Wearables waren ja schon ab und an das Thema bei “Der Ü-Bar Karst”. Unter anderem wurden da auch voreilig Tipps und Empfehlungen ausgesprochen. Nachdem Sven also alleine beim warten auf seinen Jawbone UP3 schon einen Bart bekommen hat, gibt’s ein kräftiges Dislike nachdem das Teil angekommen ist. Jawbone UP3 Review: A Fitness Fiasco Jawbone Up3 review: a feature-packed disappointment Aber mal im Ernst… wer hat was anderes erwartet, denn wie anders soll man vor Frau und Kindern den sonst den Erwerb eine iEieruhr aus Cupertino rechtfertigen. “Ja Schatz, das Ding war kaputt. Ich hab’ mir dann mal was anderes bestellt”. Überschallneuigkeiten Glide – Die eigene iOS App aus dem Baukasten Das Prinzip ist denkbar einfach. Ein Dropboxordner voller Bilder, Video, Texte, allem anderen Trara und BOOM fertig ist eure App. Das ist Glide von Chris Harris (nicht zu verwechseln mit der gleichnamigen Messenger App). Der Spaß kostet ca. $500 pro Jahr bzw. $225, wenn man seine App über die Newsstand-ähnliche GlideApp anstatt dem App Store veröffentlicht. Kickstarter: Glide - Beautifully Simple, Professional App Creation Mehr GIF’s: Glide App Review Day One Sync Day One schiebt den eigenen Sync nach und verkündet noch mehr neue Features: Mehrere Journale Eine webbasierte Version von Day One Teilbare Kollabo Journale Unterstützung für mehrere Fotos Journaling per Email Ne’ API und IFTTT Unterstützung Die Features werden dann irgendwann demnächst auch alle eintrudeln (, denn momentan sind noch nicht alle verfügbar sind… also keine… bis auf den Sync an sich). Papers kann nun Diagramme Die iPad-only App Papers von FiftyThree hat nun neue Tricks auf dem Kasten… und seit dem vorletzten Update auch endlich Unterstützung für den nativen iOS sharing dialog. MacSparky Video Field Guide Photos Mehr vom David: http://macsparky.com/photos 2.5 Stunden Tutorial-Kram für alle Photos-App Umsteiger. Im Podcast wird auch geklärt wer, wann und wie umgestiegen ist. Features vom iPhone 6S Die Gerüchtemühle dreht ja heftig… ROSAGÜLDEN soll’s alls auch im 6S geben. Gääähn. Viel spannender ist da doch was Patrick’s Moskitodrohne herausgeflogen hat: Force Touch kommt nun doch schon früher als erwartet und mehr RAM wird es auch geben… … mehr hat man bei den unscharfen 480px großen Bildern nicht erkennen können. Aber anders wäre auch kein besonders triftiger Grund für ein Upgrade gegeben, oder? Sofern der Machtdrücker Knopf nicht ganz wilde Sachen machen kann wie zum Beispiel die Blumen gießen oder “Samples abfeuern” wartet Patrick brav seine 2 Jahre ab bis das Handfunkgerät upgedatet wird. … und wo wir schon bei Apple sind wird auch fleißig noch einmal über Wünsche und Bugs geschwatzt. PS: Sven’s iPhone 6 (ohne Plus) steht auch zum Verkauf. Der Käufer kann’s auch gerne signiert bekommen. 10 Jahre Nummer 1 Da wird ja nun schon 10 Jahre im Podcasting Game sind, wollen wir einen Metacast-Flug hinlegen. Selbstbeweihräucherung, Selbstamputationen, Selbstgespräche… alles ist dabei. Erfahrt wie es zum Übercast gekommen ist und wer eigentlich in der Bordküche den Kochlöffel schwingt. Dazu gibt es noch jede Menge “Behind the Scenes”. Die “Beste Folge” bisher ist für… … Patrick nicht wirklich feststellbar. Die Menge an tollen Gästen hat es ihm da nicht leicht gemacht, aber da er keinen bevorzugen will und außerdem Picks liebt, fällt seine Wahl auf: “#UC017 Mega Picks Show”. … Sven na-tür-lich “#UC011 Auf dem Präsentierteller”. Zum einen weil er sich gerne präsentiert und zum anderen weil ein weiteres Bienchen ins Poesiealbum unter dem Eintrag “Weltretten” kleben dürfte. Da die Corporate World seit #UC011 nur noch Präsentationen raushaut die Fechner-proof sind, hat er sich den kleinen gelb-schwarzen Summsemann auch verdient. … Andreas der IMMER zwei Sachen pickend darf/muss/kann Flug #UC027: Nostalgie und Velour und die #UC007 “App Launcher Bondage” mit den Jungs von Obdev. Klar, mit Nostalgie ist es bei dem jüngsten Crew-Mitglied natürlich nicht so lange her (und wer will nicht wieder als Grundschüler Ein Colt für alle Fälle gucken). Was die Wiener 007 Folge betrifft, schlägt da wieder der Süd-Patriotismus durch. Als südlichster Stern am Übercasthimmel kann es dem Andreas natürlich auch episodentechnisch gar nicht südlich genug sein. Zu allem Elend schiebt er auch noch eine dritte Beste Episode nach… Flug #UC009… Tower an Git: Bitte committen!. Die “Schlimmste Folge” bisher ist für… … Sven eindeutig irgendeine in den ersten, unrunden Episoden… zum Beispiel die #UC005 “Das legendäre WWDC Spezial”. Vielleicht auch so legendär in Svens Gedächtnis, da er da nicht soooo vorbereitet war. Die Redaktion petzt erbarmungslos, aber räumt auch ein, dass wirklich alle Folgen bis zur 30 5 noch ein wenig mit eckigen Rädern ausgestattet waren. Genau da stimmt auch Andreas ein… der mag die ersten nämlich auch nicht. Genau da stimmt auch Patrick ein… der mag die ersten nämlich auch nicht (und trotz Franziskas Bemühungen hat er auch zu Folge 16 nicht wirklich einen Draht gehabt… dafür liebäugelt er mit einem offenporigen Absorber für sein Mikrofon). Wo sollten reisewütige Neu-Übercast-Hörer-und-Hörerinnen “einsteigen”? Sven würde eine Folge mit Mehrwert empfehlen… oder auch bei Nostalgie und Velour. Patrick hat in jeder Hinsicht keine Ahnung, sagt aber das seine Empfehlung auf die Person ankommt die in fragt. Für Leute die nix mit Computern und Mac’s zu tun haben würde er evtl. zu “#UC004 Gesundheit am Arbeitsplatz” raten. Wie der Übercast entsteht sagt uns Bordtechniker Andreas. plaudert aus dem Navigationskästchen Unsere Picks Andreas: Workflow Patrick: Transmit iOS Sven: Ally In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.

Dawn Patrol
DP 017: Ruin Your Life with Pythonista

Dawn Patrol

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2015


Nationaal Archief Truth in Advertising Fussy coffee. Exemplar The move from crack to fine coffee roasting The inevitable slide towards coffee mediocrity Tonx Blue Bottle K-cups Coffee with DRM HP Ink coffee synergy Did someone ask for an avenging angel to be added to Boards of Directors? Board of Average People Drunk Modes Temper tantrums overhead Shell inception sudo Dagerous commands Gmail Goggles Breathalyzers Legally drunk PSA (with bonus callback) Hazel needs a drunk mode Python Guy College nicknames Pythonista Reasons to use Python Good science support Whitespace matters AppleScript is a dumb language Node.js and learning through problem solving Ruby why or why the lucky stiff (not unknown anymore) Nothing really disappears from the internet why’s (poignant) Guide to Ruby “Some jerk researched him”; Lots more Sad hipster Related, anonymous people on the internet are weird Seriously, Back to Python Resizing and cropping images for fun and profit Macdrifter Editorial workflow for images Workflow distorts images The fiddler Breaking iOS within the Rules Ruin your life with Pythonista Doxing oneself Peak scripting “Exhaustive” app research instead of scripting Kids ruin Daddy’s concentration Actually creating script on iOS “It’s all Ole”, i.e. genius Tasker as Android’s uglier utilty tool Scripting: The Nerd’s Song Inability to read documentation indicates a lack of seriousness “Big-boned phone” Forcing Apple Evolution Constraints foster creativity Android’s freedom and iOS’s artisanal app market CyanogenMod Android text editors are nothing special, however, ssh plus Vim is wonderous iOS-only as clickbait Quitting the internet as clickbait The misjudged Federico article Peak iPad Thumb-typing Rumors! 12” MacBook Air We want a small device with a built-in keyboard 13” MBPr vs. MBA Airline seats are getting smaller “And Leon is getting larger” iPad apps that should be on OS X Editorial Pinswift Mr. Reader Drafts Rosetta Android apps on Chrome OS Some officially The rest unofficially Webapps are fine (or awesome) Fastmail Feedbin Trello Slack Pocket Casts Styluses…Stylii?…Digital-Marker-thingies FiftyThree Wacom Bob’s Surface Pro 3 replacement Finger-painting The software is better even if the hardware isn’t Spider bites and Farewells Blizzards in Boston Tauntaun survival Trains in the snow One-handed keyboards

How to Hold a Pencil
33 - Tare Feener

How to Hold a Pencil

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2014 27:29


Tara Feener is a self described design focused web engineer at FiftyThree.

tare fiftythree
Take Back the Day
Motions

Take Back the Day

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2014 28:41


Do you need an idea before you create something, or does going through the motions of creating something precede the idea? Sam and Simon reach some conclusions.Stuff mentioned in this episode:Slate’s podcasts, including Gabfest.Stephen King’s On Writing: A memoir of the craft, again.Salmon-wrestling in the Yemen, our smart friend Jono’s comic.Derek Sivers and his book, Anything you want.Zombie Dice.Paper by FiftyThree.A picture of Macaulay Culkin wearing a t-shirt with a picture of Ryan Gosling wearing a t-shirt that has a picture of Macaulay Culkin.Party Monster.Afrika Burn where Sam spoke to god and Simon saw some fire.How Sound – the backstory to great radio storytelling.The largest vocabulary in hip hop.Undercurrent – the organisation Sam referred to.   Macaulay Culkin wearing a t-shirt with a picture of Ryan Gosling wearing a t-shirt that has a picture of Macaulay Culkin  And Popeye. Not so full of iron.

Edgemade
6 Make Something Intuitive with FiftyThree

Edgemade

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2014 66:56


Jon Harris, John Ikeda and Hauke Gentzkow of FiftyThree join Stephan Ango to discuss their experiences designing hardware and intuitive creative tools.

Danielle Meder and FiftyThree: Meet the Developer
Danielle Meder and FiftyThree: Meet the Developer

Danielle Meder and FiftyThree: Meet the Developer

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2014 43:44


developers meder fiftythree
Danielle Meder and FiftyThree: Meet the Developer
Danielle Meder and FiftyThree: Meet the Developer

Danielle Meder and FiftyThree: Meet the Developer

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2014 43:44


developers meder fiftythree
The Drill Down
312: Delicious, Creamy Sochi

The Drill Down

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2014 74:14


This week, Microsoft has a new CEO, Facebook turns ten and releases a new app, the NSA plays favorites with Yahoo, and journalists in Sochi are getting insta-hacked. What We're Playing With Dwayne: Nest Headlines Microsoft names Satya Nadella to replace Steve Ballmer Gates will spend a third of time at Microsoft, ‘substantially increasing' role Yahoo leads NSA-FBI account content data demands The New Snowden Revelation Is Dangerous for Anonymous — And for All of Us Audible Book of the Week The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: The Primary Phase by Douglas Adams Sign up at AudibleTrial.com/TheDrillDown Music Break: Soviet Connection by Michael Hunter Hot Topics Journalists at Sochi are live-tweeting their hilarious and gross hotel experiences @SochiProblems Visitors to Sochi Olympics should expect to be hacked Meet “Paper,” Facebook's New Answer for Browsing — And Creating — Mobile Media FiftyThree Files Trademark For “Paper” On Its 10th Anniversary, Facebook Isn't Cool Anymore And That's Okay The Drill Down Video of the Week Facebook/LookBack Subscribe! The Drill Down on iTunes (Subscribe now!) Add us on Stitcher! The Drill Down on Facebook The Drill Down on Twitter Geeks Of Doom's The Drill Down is a roundtable-style audio podcast where we discuss the most important issues of the week, in tech and on the web and how they affect us all. Hosts are Geeks of Doom contributor Andrew Sorcini (Mr. BabyMan), marketing research analyst Dwayne De Freitas, and Box tech consultant Tosin Onafowokan. Occasionally joining them is Startup Digest CTO Christopher Burnor.

Core77 Podcast
Afterschool Podcast, Episode 14 - FiftyThree (12/17)

Core77 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2014 74:18


You probably know FiftyThree from their iPad sketch app, Paper. Unlike other sketch apps, which are loaded with pro features, Paper is notable for how pared down it is. By using just six brushes, a color mixing palette, and intuitive gestures, Paper gets out of the way of the sketch process and allows you to focus on getting your ideas down as effortlessly as possible. FiftyThree has brought this same philosophy to their first hardware product, called Pencil. Pencil is a stylus designed to compliment Paper, and just like Paper, it eliminates pro features, making way for more natural feeling ones—like an eraser and probably the smartest take on a blending tool ever. Today, we have three of the industrial designers responsible for Pencil's creation: FiftyThree's Jon Harris, John Ikeda and Audrey Louchart.

Core77 Podcast
Afterschool Podcast, Episode 14 - Pencil by FiftyThree (12/17)

Core77 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2013 74:18


You probably know FiftyThree from their iPad sketch app, Paper. Unlike other sketch apps, which are loaded with pro features, Paper is notable for how pared down it is. By using just six brushes, a color mixing palette, and intuitive gestures, Paper gets out of the way of the sketch process and allows you to focus on getting your ideas down as effortlessly as possible. FiftyThree has brought this same philosophy to their first hardware product, called Pencil. Pencil is a stylus designed to compliment Paper, and just like Paper, it eliminates pro features, making way for more natural feeling ones - like an eraser and probably the smartest take on a blending tool ever. FiftyThree has brought this same philosophy to their first hardware product, called Pencil. Pencil is a stylus designed to compliment Paper, and just like Paper, it eliminates pro features, making way for more natural feeling ones - like an eraser and probably the smartest take on a blending tool ever. Today, we have three of the industrial designers responsible for Pencil’s creation: FiftyThree’s Jon Harris, John Ikeda, and Audrey Louchart.

Core77 Presents Afterschool
Episode 14: FiftyThree

Core77 Presents Afterschool

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2013 74:18


fiftythree
App Showcase
App Showcase - 4

App Showcase

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2012 6:36


Students from McAllen ISD's Travis Middle School demonstrate their iPad app recommendations. In this episode, the students recommend the iPad apps inCLass, Paper by FiftyThree, Educreations Interactive Whiteboard, iTranslate, and Forge of Neon 3D.