work
- If you're small, you're in a position where it's to your advantage to be weird—you can have a point of view that the big tech companies never could. In the world of chairs—you're not going to build a cheaper chair than Ikea. Why not build something they couldn't—like a more interesting one?
from No More Boring Apps | (Not Boring) Software by (Not Boring) Software Inc.
Jake added 4mo ago
- So what’s the smallest way to have that kind of experience?
from Protocol Fiction, Desire, and Belief by Matt Webb
Jake added 6mo ago
Matt Webb asks in Protocols, Desire, and Belief in the context of creating belief and desire as illustrated by Stripes insanely simple “seven lines of code” to integrate
- Material artifacts have an ability to enroll and align different tribes in a way that text doesn’t. The goal is to make “boundary objects” - artifacts that self-translate for all kinds of different tribes, and allow these actors to communicate with one another, even when they’re speaking different languages.
Think of the magical role of self-evident... See morefrom Protocol Fiction, Desire, and Belief by Matt Webb
Jake added 6mo ago
- Normalise to persuade.
from Protocol Fiction, Desire, and Belief by Matt Webb
Jake added 6mo ago
from Matt Ward in Fiction as Pedagogic Practice
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