douglas berger

Sep 17

“Sometimes people think that a simple description of a product means there isn’t much there. But really it’s the opposite. You have to be able to distill down what you do in a way that your customers can easily understand the value proposition. It’s hard, but it’s also a business necessity.” — Michael Arrington, TechCrunch

(Source: TechCrunch)

Sep 16

“When you buy something cheap and bad, the best you’re going to feel about it is when you buy it. When you buy something expensive and good, the worst you’re going to feel about it is when you buy it.” — Redfin blog

(Source: blog.redfin.com)

“So while I don’t expect Twitter to master its own destiny as far as the decentralization of the medium goes, I do support the idea, and I hope that Twitter as a business can coexist with the need for the world to have a free, open, reliable, and verifiable way for humans to instantly communicate in a one-to-many fashion.” — Alex Payne, former lead of Twitter’s developer platform

(Source: al3x.net)

Sep 15

Twitter’s growth curve is unbelievable.

Twitter’s growth curve is unbelievable.

Sep 14

RSS isn’t dead, it’s just too complex

There is a debate going on among tech personalities and companies over whether or not RSS is dead.  Here’s a quick roundup:

Ironically, I had been in a debate about this very thing prior to Bloglines’ announcement last week.  RSS is an amazing “standard” for connecting sites and services together - or forming the “pipes through which news flows”, as Winer puts it.  However it has failed thus far to hit mainstream with consumers.  It is just too complex.  What it has succeeded with is becoming the plumbing for things like Twitter news accounts, aggregation, etc.  This is made possible by CMS plugis that hit Twitter’s API, and services like TwitterFeed that pull items from RSS feeds, and post them via Twitter.

If all browsers - including IE - had a standard way of allowing people to subscribe to various services, and the feed readers didn’t resemble email inboxes, then maybe the outcome would have been different.  If you could click on the little orange subscribe link, and be taken to some usable page that walks you through the process of subscribing, everyone might be using RSS today.  Instead, most people have no idea what it is, and many - including myself - have turned to Twitter and Facebook to consume content.

The future of RSS

In order for RSS to even have a future, there needs to be cooperation among browsers, publishers, and feed readers. RSS also needs to be rebranded, as the acronym is too daunting for technophobes.  Let’s call it “Subscriptions”, and when you add a feed to your reader, you are “Subscribing”.  This is how it should have been from the beginning, but nobody stopped and thought about the implications of using such a non-consumer-friendly term.

Let’s summarize what needs to happen:

Who’s with me?

Sep 10

“Good design is making something intelligible and memorable. Great design is making something memorable and meaningful.” — Dieter Rams, legendary industrial designer

Sep 09

There used to be such beautiful trees by my parents house.  Now they’re putting in a highway.

There used to be such beautiful trees by my parents house. Now they’re putting in a highway.

Sep 05

At Chandler Hill Vineyards. Vineyards are so beautiful.

At Chandler Hill Vineyards. Vineyards are so beautiful.

Sep 03

Finishing the swim at the 2010 Chicago Triathlon.

Finishing the swim at the 2010 Chicago Triathlon.

Apr 19

“If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough” — Albert Einstein

iPad Art: Kind Old Man

iPad Art: Kind Old Man

iPad Art: Sad Orange

iPad Art: Sad Orange

iPad Art: Cool dude

iPad Art: Cool dude

iPad Art: Hoo Hoo

iPad Art: Hoo Hoo