Absolutely loved this bit of back-story on the "upside down" Apple logo that used to be on every Mac laptop, but got flipped (right side up?) by Steve Jobs.
Great, short read, shared by @gruber a few days ago.
#Design Folks: Part 2 of my series on understanding and addressing gaps in discovery is now up on
Mind the Product!
Last time, I discussed ways to find the "why" behind a solution already in progress. In this article, I look at discovery gaps you might encounter and how to address them.
This week I will mostly be posting pictures from the Musée des Arts et Métiers, a museum of industrial design. Here’s some early sound equipment - the one with the two horns is an early cinema sound system for providing music for silent movies. #stereo#design
TUXEDO Atlas rethinks the classical desktop computer: walnut front application, glass side panel. Fits seamlessly into your living room or work environment.
The 1998 Fiat Multipla is almost always included on clickbaity listicles about the ugliest ever cars. The Autopian's Adrian Clarke makes the case for why its design, while aesthetically challenging, was actually brilliant. "A constant criticism of car design I hear a lot is the ‘form should follow function’ bulls***," he writes. "Be careful what you wish for, because the Multipla is what you could end up with."
I find #NodeJS deprecation warnings hit the sweet spot between jarring enough to be annoying and not informative enough to be useful.
So, in Kitten, the first time you hit a deprecation warning, you get a message telling you there are deprecation warnings.
If you care, you can open the interactive shell and view the kitten.deprecationWarnings list, which will show you full details including the stack trace.