accomplice | 9 years ago | on: MoMA Will Make Thousands of Exhibition Images Available Online
accomplice's comments
accomplice | 9 years ago | on: Show HN: My side project – Laps – Client, Project and Time management
I guess you are able to do this in your spare time if you are really good at managing your spare time eh?
accomplice | 12 years ago | on: Ask HN: Would you start a startup if the upside was limited?
If it means helping to define and grow the culture I can do my best work in. To work with people I admire and trust(and may even be around for the next thing).. that's better than most jobs anywhere and incentive enough to be honest. It just so happens I also love designing great products, but designing great places to work can be just as fulfilling.
accomplice | 12 years ago | on: Ask HN: Smartest thing you've ever done?
accomplice | 12 years ago | on: Ask HN: Becoming a Freelancer in 6 months?
accomplice | 12 years ago | on: Ask HN: Becoming a Freelancer in 6 months?
You may be underestimating the value of intermediate skills. While a large agency may not pay you as freelancer, you could easily get a roster of clients through referrals and good old fashion hustle on craigslist (which leads to more clients) I have plenty of experience making this work as developer... which is weird since I am not a developer. If I can do it by accident, I am sure you can do it on purpose.
accomplice | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: Does anybody need 16 years old designer? Hire me
"For flare, I'd make the body text such as username/password small like an 11px font."
I am curious why you would say that?
accomplice | 13 years ago | on: How did you learn design?
accomplice | 13 years ago | on: How did you learn design?
accomplice | 13 years ago | on: How did you learn design?
accomplice | 13 years ago | on: How did you learn design?
2. Look at the whole, not just the pieces. Yes you need modularity in the form of UI building blocks, but that comes later. The biggest difference between design and engineering is that design solves every problem at once first by considering the entire system and questioning the inputs and outputs. Engineering tends to break problems into atomic units so it can work on them serially. Good designers solve as many problems as possible in one solution. Those include visual design, usability and product marketing problems.
I hate to be so cryptic but think of it as starting to sketch out the negative the space around an object. Purposely being blind to the details until the form has appeared. It's not magic but it;s really not engineering.
3. Study, learn, appreciate and dabble in typography for print.
This is the detail part.
The web has not yet come of age in this department (but it's getting there fast). By way of typography you will also learn grid systems and a few other useful bits. Buy the Type Directors Club annual, but real font from real foundries and appreciate them. Learn illustrator and appreciate those vectors -- Its worth mentioning that I don't know any designers who use Photoshop for UX.
4. Recognize the mistakes of most developers starting out with design. They are very often the same. Here are a few things I see often repeated.
No white space (because how is white space efficient right?)
Lack of hierarchy (because everything is important)
Dark backgrounds and overly masculine aesthetic
Too much contrast
Lack of interplay between elements and color
Fucking blue and black everywhere!
accomplice | 13 years ago | on: Is there some kind of tech crash happening right now?
accomplice | 13 years ago | on: Why do people say email is broken?
The real failing is that the interaction paradigms for tuning the noise to signal ratio are extremely manual and difficult to verify if it has been adjusted or filtered properly once set.
I could be as easy as choosing who I care about, what I care about, and when I care about it.. but instead we are forced to set up smart filters, formulas etc and assume that we wont miss anything important.
Also, 5 clicks to unsubscribe is another kind of fail altogether that makes pruning the inbox time consuming and hardly worth the effort when compared to just letting the spam, coupon pepper your real communications. Wouldn't it be nice if email automatically park those offers on a side bar? ..along with the rest of the no-replies? Keeping the conversations and action items front and center.
accomplice | 14 years ago | on: Ask HN: losing faith in the startup where I'm employee #1
You can get another engineer!
accomplice | 14 years ago | on: Ask HN: Is it frowned upon to copy design?
Here are 3 very common scenarios and likely outcomes.
Copy verbatim is really frowned up. Stealing an image outright is seriously frowned upon (you get served a DMCA notice or similar), same with well crafted and very specific CSS / HTML. (No one cares about layout however, steal all you want)
But what happens when you are inspired by someone else's work? Did you take something good and make it better! Great we love that; this form of appropriation is typically considered flattering. (you get featured in a blog)
Or
Did you take something that looks awesome and re-purpose it for something that it does not quite work for, and when stitched together the design fell apart? perhaps because it was refactored by the hands of someone inexperienced? thats when people get really mad and they start coming after you. (You get made fun of in a blog if the changes or substantial enough to be called 30%)
Its worth a long conversation to be honest, this was the shortest unedited 2 cents I could post on the subject without reverting to well known cliches.
accomplice | 14 years ago | on: Ask HN: How does an engineer learn design?
accomplice | 14 years ago | on: Ask HN: We were told our idea is amazing, but our startup is failing - what now?
Quick question: why is this a website? this seems like information I would want on my smartphone so I could have easy access on the go.
accomplice | 14 years ago | on: Ask HN: First startup. What do I ask so I don't get screwed?
http://secondverse.tumblr.com/post/5840343627/so-you-want-to...
Here a couple of red flags to look out for. They are looking to be a billion dollar company. This is another way of saying that they have giant egos and unrealistic exit plans. Find the people that know the topography of the exit landscape and how they fit into it.
Business Development personel without a product: For most startups, its just too early to have a BizDev person around, unless partnerships are critical to the success of product
The CEO can't code
They have 1 Jr level designer to feed 6 engineers
Everyone uses Windows, including dev-ops. (run away)
accomplice | 15 years ago | on: Ask HN: Recommendations on Learning Photoshop?
accomplice | 15 years ago | on: Ask HN: Recommendations on Learning Photoshop?