Saved by sari
Building bicycles for our minds
We tell entrepreneurs to find a need, test, and trial until they find a solution to that need, move fast, and break things. Yes, betas work; our method is a process of induction, right out of the playbook of the scientific method. Yet we need to insert a framework of intentionality into that process so that at the end of our experiments, we have a
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Coupled with this stemming of developer space for innovation, the place for startups to “ship” things and users to find new things — the app store — has atrophied. Maybe we have reached a natural apex for innovation on the UX of this device, or maybe discovery was badly implemented. Regardless, as the chart below illustrates, getting
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The next wave of innovation is going to decentralize the network; however, that change doesn’t address many of the societal issues above. What we need is a vision, a compass for the future we want for the new software we want to build.
John Borthwick • Building bicycles for our minds
Outside of the open web, email, and text, there isn’t a scaled D2C channel that is not controlled by a major platform. So the primary way that startups have to reach customers today is via paid acquisition. That’s why the question an investor asks today to a startup that is scaling is: where are you buying audience and what are your customer acqui
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This is how technology should work: starting with a human need, and a purpose, technology should extend outwards with the intent of expanding the human, not confining or reducing.
John Borthwick • Building bicycles for our minds
Today’s platforms have prioritized their ability to behaviourally target and gamify the experience to keep users hooked, over enhancing peer-to-peer connections. The consequence is that today I wake up many a day and ask myself why am I bothering to use this?
John Borthwick • Building bicycles for our minds
Change takes time and it usually happens fitfully — nothing, slowly, nothing, slowly, nothing, nothing, and then boom: Change. If there was an emoji formula for change, it would be: Δ =….💧..💧..💧.💧💧💧..💦 ..🌊
John Borthwick • Building bicycles for our minds
The social platforms of web 2.0 are broken. On the path to mass scale and attention-based monetization, they compromised much of their usefulness to users. I think back to the early days of the social web and how much interesting stuff I would find each day and how connected it made me feel. Today fake accounts and fake posts d
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In 1980, Steve Jobs was discussing computing and used a simple yet powerful metaphor for how computers can be bicycles for the mind. Technology amplifies our capabilities — and computing can now do the same thing for our minds. Here are two versions of the same talk by Jobs — one in 1980 and another ten years later, both around a min
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AAMAAT are operating and executing in their interest, based on architectural decisions that were made a while ago and on the choices we made as users, supporting the attention-based business models. Free isn’t turning out to be without costs.