
Podcast
DN FM
36
0
DN FM features the latest stories in design and tech, brought to you by Designer News.
The show is a bi-weekly podcast by the community, for the community. Through interviews, news and community segments, it aims to spark a meaningful conversation on design.
DN FM features the latest stories in design and tech, brought to you by Designer News.
The show is a bi-weekly podcast by the community, for the community. Through interviews, news and community segments, it aims to spark a meaningful conversation on design.
William Channer on the future of information consumption, building products remotely, and raising money for startups.
Episode in
DN FM
William Channer is a partner at the Panda Network, and he is also the host of Dorm Room Tycoon. In this episode we discuss the future of information consumption, what role Panda plays in that, his experience building products remotely, and his thoughts on raising money for startups.
Featured Jobs
Brigade is looking for a Senior Product Designer
Webflow is looking for a Web Designer and Educator
Episode Highlights
3:00: William’s background, including what he studied in school and his early copywriting career. He also talks about what made him want to leave advertising, as well as what he appreciated about the industry.
7:30: William’s first start-up, which was Voto-App, and what he learned from it.
11:15: Information about Panda Network: What it is, what they do, and what the goal is in terms of who is using the site and why.
16:00: William’s thoughts on what the future will look like, including automation and the way searches will work.
17:10: What he learned from Dorm Room Tycoon, including the downside of raising money for a startup.
22:15: Some of the new pro features of Panda that you can expect in the near future.
23:15: How William met his business partner, Ahmet Sulek, and how Panda came to be. He also touches on some of the challenges of a long-distance business relationship.
31:00: William’s advice on collaborating and his thoughts on the interesting things going on in the design world.
Show Links
Dorm Room Tycoon
Panda Network
William on Twitter
O’Reilly Design Conference (20% off the ticket price with code: PCDNEWS)
Jobs for Designers and Developers
36:36
William Channer on the future of information consumption, building products remotely, and raising money for startups.
Episode in
DN FM
William Channer is a partner at the Panda Network, and he is also the host of Dorm Room Tycoon. In this episode we discuss the future of information consumption, what role Panda plays in that, his experience building products remotely, and his thoughts on raising money for startups.
Featured Jobs
Brigade is looking for a Senior Product Designer
Webflow is looking for a Web Designer and Educator
Episode Highlights
3:00: William’s background, including what he studied in school and his early copywriting career. He also talks about what made him want to leave advertising, as well as what he appreciated about the industry.
7:30: William’s first start-up, which was Voto-App, and what he learned from it.
11:15: Information about Panda Network: What it is, what they do, and what the goal is in terms of who is using the site and why.
16:00: William’s thoughts on what the future will look like, including automation and the way searches will work.
17:10: What he learned from Dorm Room Tycoon, including the downside of raising money for a startup.
22:15: Some of the new pro features of Panda that you can expect in the near future.
23:15: How William met his business partner, Ahmet Sulek, and how Panda came to be. He also touches on some of the challenges of a long-distance business relationship.
31:00: William’s advice on collaborating and his thoughts on the interesting things going on in the design world.
Show Links
Dorm Room Tycoon
Panda Network
William on Twitter
O’Reilly Design Conference (20% off the ticket price with code: PCDNEWS)
Jobs for Designers and Developers
36:36
William Channer on the future of information consumption, building products remotely, and raising money for startups.
Episode in
DN FM
William Channer is a partner at the Panda Network, and he is also the host of Dorm Room Tycoon. In this episode we discuss the future of information consumption, what role Panda plays in that, his experience building products remotely, and his thoughts on raising money for startups.
Featured Jobs
Brigade is looking for a Senior Product Designer
Webflow is looking for a Web Designer and Educator
Episode Highlights
3:00: William’s background, including what he studied in school and his early copywriting career. He also talks about what made him want to leave advertising, as well as what he appreciated about the industry.
7:30: William’s first start-up, which was Voto-App, and what he learned from it.
11:15: Information about Panda Network: What it is, what they do, and what the goal is in terms of who is using the site and why.
16:00: William’s thoughts on what the future will look like, including automation and the way searches will work.
17:10: What he learned from Dorm Room Tycoon, including the downside of raising money for a startup.
22:15: Some of the new pro features of Panda that you can expect in the near future.
23:15: How William met his business partner, Ahmet Sulek, and how Panda came to be. He also touches on some of the challenges of a long-distance business relationship.
31:00: William’s advice on collaborating and his thoughts on the interesting things going on in the design world.
Show Links
Dorm Room Tycoon
Panda Network
William on Twitter
O’Reilly Design Conference (20% off the ticket price with code: PCDNEWS)
Jobs for Designers and Developers
36:36
Ash Huang on moving from brand design into product design, and what inspired her to become a writer
Episode in
DN FM
Ash Huang is a designer and award-winning novelist from Silicon Valley. She has done product design and branding for companies such as Pinterest, Twitter and Dropbox. Her writing has been featured in numerous publications including Fast Company, Offscreen magazine. Today she shares how she moved from brand design into product design, and what inspired her to become a writer.
Featured Jobs:
Toptal is looking for a Senior Web Designer
Google is looking for an Interface Designer
Bench is looking for a Brand Designer
Episode Highlights:
2:28: Introduction: Ash describes pursuing multiple creative professions, and the unifying thread in all her work.
6:08: Ash’s educational background and experiences in design school.
11:47: Ash discusses the job market after graduation and the attractiveness of agencies and startups to prospective employees.
15:40: Ash joins Twitter, and describes her work on brand design there and at Pinterest.
18:18: Finding an interest in product design and lessons learned from other product designers.
Exploring the effects of product design and user experience on overall brand.
23:38: Inspiration for her first novel, The Firesteel, and becoming a writer. She also describes the process behind the design of her book cover.
29:42: Ash talks about her newest book, Suspension, and the themes examined. She also shares her experience writing a second book, compared to the first.
34:48: How Ash finds inspiration to write fiction and parallels with reality.
36:30: Creative satisfaction and personal fulfillment while balancing multiple creative professions.
Show Links:
Ash Huang Website
Ash Huang on Twitter
Suspension
The Firesteel
Photo from Techies by Helena Price.
38:32
Ash Huang on moving from brand design into product design, and what inspired her to become a writer
Episode in
DN FM
Ash Huang is a designer and award-winning novelist from Silicon Valley. She has done product design and branding for companies such as Pinterest, Twitter and Dropbox. Her writing has been featured in numerous publications including Fast Company, Offscreen magazine. Today she shares how she moved from brand design into product design, and what inspired her to become a writer.
Featured Jobs:
Toptal is looking for a Senior Web Designer
Google is looking for an Interface Designer
Bench is looking for a Brand Designer
Episode Highlights:
2:28: Introduction: Ash describes pursuing multiple creative professions, and the unifying thread in all her work.
6:08: Ash’s educational background and experiences in design school.
11:47: Ash discusses the job market after graduation and the attractiveness of agencies and startups to prospective employees.
15:40: Ash joins Twitter, and describes her work on brand design there and at Pinterest.
18:18: Finding an interest in product design and lessons learned from other product designers.
Exploring the effects of product design and user experience on overall brand.
23:38: Inspiration for her first novel, The Firesteel, and becoming a writer. She also describes the process behind the design of her book cover.
29:42: Ash talks about her newest book, Suspension, and the themes examined. She also shares her experience writing a second book, compared to the first.
34:48: How Ash finds inspiration to write fiction and parallels with reality.
36:30: Creative satisfaction and personal fulfillment while balancing multiple creative professions.
Show Links:
Ash Huang Website
Ash Huang on Twitter
Suspension
The Firesteel
Photo from Techies by Helena Price.
38:32
Ash Huang on moving from brand design into product design, and what inspired her to become a writer
Episode in
DN FM
Ash Huang is a designer and award-winning novelist from Silicon Valley. She has done product design and branding for companies such as Pinterest, Twitter and Dropbox. Her writing has been featured in numerous publications including Fast Company, Offscreen magazine. Today she shares how she moved from brand design into product design, and what inspired her to become a writer.
Featured Jobs:
Toptal is looking for a Senior Web Designer
Google is looking for an Interface Designer
Bench is looking for a Brand Designer
Episode Highlights:
2:28: Introduction: Ash describes pursuing multiple creative professions, and the unifying thread in all her work.
6:08: Ash’s educational background and experiences in design school.
11:47: Ash discusses the job market after graduation and the attractiveness of agencies and startups to prospective employees.
15:40: Ash joins Twitter, and describes her work on brand design there and at Pinterest.
18:18: Finding an interest in product design and lessons learned from other product designers.
Exploring the effects of product design and user experience on overall brand.
23:38: Inspiration for her first novel, The Firesteel, and becoming a writer. She also describes the process behind the design of her book cover.
29:42: Ash talks about her newest book, Suspension, and the themes examined. She also shares her experience writing a second book, compared to the first.
34:48: How Ash finds inspiration to write fiction and parallels with reality.
36:30: Creative satisfaction and personal fulfillment while balancing multiple creative professions.
Show Links:
Ash Huang Website
Ash Huang on Twitter
Suspension
The Firesteel
Photo from Techies by Helena Price.
38:32
Clark Valberg on InVision's past, present, and future
Episode in
DN FM
Clark Valberg is the founder and CEO of InVision. If you are a designer, you have probably gotten an email from Clark or from InVision at one time or another, but if you’re not familiar with the company, InVision is a prototyping and collaboration platform for designers. Today we’ll talk about the business’s past, present and future.
Featured Jobs
Reaktor is looking for a Senior UX Designer
Reaktor is looking for a Senior Product Designer
Mono is looking for a User Interface Designer
Close.io is looking for a Product Designer
Episode Highlights
4:20: What Clark thinks works well about InVision.
6:45: How Clark handles the organization of premier showings of Design Disruptors.
11:00: About the Inside Design series: Where the customers came from and how the interviewing process evolved.
13:00: How InVision started and what made it different from other consulting companies during that time.
19:45: Why it’s important for agencies to work on products.
23:35: How InVision handles research.
28:30: Where Clark sees InVision’s place the current and shifting marketplace.
36:20: How InVision is selling a process, not a product.
Show Links
Peel (10% off with code: DN7)
Designer News Jobs
Design Disruptors (InVision Documentary)
Clark on LinkedIn
40:40
Clark Valberg on InVision's past, present, and future
Episode in
DN FM
Clark Valberg is the founder and CEO of InVision. If you are a designer, you have probably gotten an email from Clark or from InVision at one time or another, but if you’re not familiar with the company, InVision is a prototyping and collaboration platform for designers. Today we’ll talk about the business’s past, present and future.
Featured Jobs
Reaktor is looking for a Senior UX Designer
Reaktor is looking for a Senior Product Designer
Mono is looking for a User Interface Designer
Close.io is looking for a Product Designer
Episode Highlights
4:20: What Clark thinks works well about InVision.
6:45: How Clark handles the organization of premier showings of Design Disruptors.
11:00: About the Inside Design series: Where the customers came from and how the interviewing process evolved.
13:00: How InVision started and what made it different from other consulting companies during that time.
19:45: Why it’s important for agencies to work on products.
23:35: How InVision handles research.
28:30: Where Clark sees InVision’s place the current and shifting marketplace.
36:20: How InVision is selling a process, not a product.
Show Links
Peel (10% off with code: DN7)
Designer News Jobs
Design Disruptors (InVision Documentary)
Clark on LinkedIn
40:40
Clark Valberg on InVision's past, present, and future
Episode in
DN FM
Clark Valberg is the founder and CEO of InVision. If you are a designer, you have probably gotten an email from Clark or from InVision at one time or another, but if you’re not familiar with the company, InVision is a prototyping and collaboration platform for designers. Today we’ll talk about the business’s past, present and future.
Featured Jobs
Reaktor is looking for a Senior UX Designer)
Reaktor is looking for a Senior Product Designer)
Mono is looking for a User Interface Designer
Close.io is looking for a Product Designer
Episode Highlights
4:20: What Clark thinks works well about InVision.
6:45: How Clark handles the organization of premier showings of Design Disruptors.
11:00: About the Inside Design series: Where the customers came from and how the interviewing process evolved.
13:00: How InVision started and what made it different from other consulting companies during that time.
19:45: Why it’s important for agencies to work on products.
23:35: How InVision handles research.
28:30: Where Clark sees InVision’s place the current and shifting marketplace.
36:20: How InVision is selling a process, not a product.
Show Links
Peel (10% off with code: DN7)
Designer News Jobs
Design Disruptors (InVision Documentary)
Clark on LinkedIn
40:40
Linda Liukas on teaching children how to program by sparking their curiosity
Episode in
DN FM
Linda Liukas, thinks the key to helping children learn is to spark their curiosity. Linda is the author and illustrator behind Hello Ruby, a series of children’s books about technology. She’s also the co-founder of Rails Girls, a community designed to help women understand technology.
How do we teach children how to program? There are many different theories on this important investment in our future.
Featured Jobs
Memebox is looking for a Sr. Product Designer
Episode Highlights
2:30: Introduction: Why Linda focuses her education on children, and how they can positively impact adults as well. Linda also tells us about her educational and professional background.
4:50: How Hello Ruby came to be, from conception to funding to final publishing. Linda also discusses how she came up with the story, the exercises and the final illustrations.
11:00: Information on Linda’s second book: What was easier this time around, and what this second project will be about.
17:30: Why technology is as much of an art as it is a science, and why programming is a tool rather than simply a process.
18:30: How Linda explains coding to children in simple language and what she hopes kids can take away from her books.
22:00: What the future look like for Linda’s books and upcoming projects.
Show Links
Designer News Jobs
Linda Liukas on Twitter
Hello Ruby
Rails Girls
27:08
Linda Liukas on teaching children how to program by sparking their curiosity
Episode in
DN FM
Linda Liukas, thinks the key to helping children learn is to spark their curiosity. Linda is the author and illustrator behind Hello Ruby, a series of children’s books about technology. She’s also the co-founder of Rails Girls, a community designed to help women understand technology.
How do we teach children how to program? There are many different theories on this important investment in our future.
Featured Jobs
Memebox is looking for a Sr. Product Designer
Episode Highlights
2:30: Introduction: Why Linda focuses her education on children, and how they can positively impact adults as well. Linda also tells us about her educational and professional background.
4:50: How Hello Ruby came to be, from conception to funding to final publishing. Linda also discusses how she came up with the story, the exercises and the final illustrations.
11:00: Information on Linda’s second book: What was easier this time around, and what this second project will be about.
17:30: Why technology is as much of an art as it is a science, and why programming is a tool rather than simply a process.
18:30: How Linda explains coding to children in simple language and what she hopes kids can take away from her books.
22:00: What the future look like for Linda’s books and upcoming projects.
Show Links
Designer News Jobs
Linda Liukas on Twitter
Hello Ruby
Rails Girls
27:08
Linda Liukas on teaching children how to program by sparking their curiosity
Episode in
DN FM
Linda Liukas, thinks the key to helping children learn is to spark their curiosity. Linda is the author and illustrator behind Hello Ruby, a series of children’s books about technology. She’s also the co-founder of Rails Girls, a community designed to help women understand technology.
How do we teach children how to program? There are many different theories on this important investment in our future.
Featured Jobs
Memebox is looking for a Sr. Product Designer
Episode Highlights
2:30: Introduction: Why Linda focuses her education on children, and how they can positively impact adults as well. Linda also tells us about her educational and professional background.
4:50: How Hello Ruby came to be, from conception to funding to final publishing. Linda also discusses how she came up with the story, the exercises and the final illustrations.
11:00: Information on Linda’s second book: What was easier this time around, and what this second project will be about.
17:30: Why technology is as much of an art as it is a science, and why programming is a tool rather than simply a process.
18:30: How Linda explains coding to children in simple language and what she hopes kids can take away from her books.
22:00: What the future look like for Linda’s books and upcoming projects.
Show Links
Designer News Jobs
Linda Liukas on Twitter
Hello Ruby
Rails Girls
27:08
Jessica Hische on lettering through life and the creative side of business
Episode in
DN FM
Jessica Hische is on the show this week to share all kinds of stories, taking us back to her propensity for art and how it turned into a career; being broke in college and crafting her own typefaces out of necessity; and working with visionaries like Wes Anderson and freelancing for illustrious clients.
Jessica is a lettering artist, designer and author. Her clients include Nike, NPR, New York Times, Samsung and many more. Look out for her work and products.
###Featured Jobs
Qardio is looking for a Senior Graphic Designer in London/SF
Delighted is looking for a UI Engineer in Palo Alto/remote
Episode Highlights
How Jessica handles criticism and getting specific feedback that goes against what she knows as a designer 4:00
Analog vs. digital tooling 8:00
How Jessica’s propensity for art when she was young eventually turned into a career, what courses she took, how her parents supported her, and why she began lettering 12:20
How working with Louise Fili inspired discipline and business acumen 20:15
What prompted Jessica to begin freelancing, and how she made it work 24:00
Some of Jessica’s side projects, including Daily Drop Cap and the quirky Thousands Under Ninety 28:00
Why work and play are one and the same 37:10
The most common and interesting questions that Jessica gets from young designers 38:00
42:30
Jessica Hische on lettering through life and the creative side of business
Episode in
DN FM
Jessica Hische is on the show this week to share all kinds of stories, taking us back to her propensity for art and how it turned into a career; being broke in college and crafting her own typefaces out of necessity; and working with visionaries like Wes Anderson and freelancing for illustrious clients.
Jessica is a lettering artist, designer and author. Her clients include Nike, NPR, New York Times, Samsung and many more. Look out for her work and products.
###Featured Jobs
Qardio is looking for a Senior Graphic Designer in London/SF
Delighted is looking for a UI Engineer in Palo Alto/remote
Episode Highlights
How Jessica handles criticism and getting specific feedback that goes against what she knows as a designer 4:00
Analog vs. digital tooling 8:00
How Jessica’s propensity for art when she was young eventually turned into a career, what courses she took, how her parents supported her, and why she began lettering 12:20
How working with Louise Fili inspired discipline and business acumen 20:15
What prompted Jessica to begin freelancing, and how she made it work 24:00
Some of Jessica’s side projects, including Daily Drop Cap and the quirky Thousands Under Ninety 28:00
Why work and play are one and the same 37:10
The most common and interesting questions that Jessica gets from young designers 38:00
42:30
Jessica Hische on lettering through life and the creative side of business
Episode in
DN FM
Jessica Hische is on the show this week to share all kinds of stories, taking us back to her propensity for art and how it turned into a career; being broke in college and crafting her own typefaces out of necessity; and working with visionaries like Wes Anderson and freelancing for illustrious clients.
Jessica is a lettering artist, designer and author. Her clients include Nike, NPR, New York Times, Samsung and many more. Look out for her work and products.
Featured Jobs
Qardio is looking for a Senior Graphic Designer in London/SF
Delighted is looking for a UI Engineer in Palo Alto/remote
Episode Highlights
How Jessica handles criticism and getting specific feedback that goes against what she knows as a designer 4:00
Analog vs. digital tooling 8:00
How Jessica’s propensity for art when she was young eventually turned into a career, what courses she took, how her parents supported her, and why she began lettering 12:20
How working with Louise Fili inspired discipline and business acumen 20:15
What prompted Jessica to begin freelancing, and how she made it work 24:00
Some of Jessica’s side projects, including Daily Drop Cap and the quirky Thousands Under Ninety 28:00
Why work and play are one and the same 37:10
The most common and interesting questions that Jessica gets from young designers 38:00
42:30
Randy J. Hunt on true user-empathy and lessons learned growing Etsy
Episode in
DN FM
Randy J. Hunt joins us this week for a kaleidoscopic design discussion. He lays down all kinds of wisdom about developing true empathy for users, career paths, holistic design and business models. Then we explore Etsy; what it was like helming early design projects, challenges growing the team and how Etsy's mission attracts the calibre of designers it does. Finally, Randy name-drops the luminaries that he takes inspiration from.
Randy is the VP of Design at Etsy and author of Product Design for the Web. You can find him on Twitter at @randyjhunt.
Also: Payam Rajabi of Shopify and Kieran Rheaume of Designer News talk shop about the state of design tools as a number of new players like Figma, Subform and Affinity Designer emerge.
Sponsor
This week’s episode is brought to you by Dropmark. Dropmark is the smart way to organize all your links, files, and notes into visual collections, perfect for individuals and teams alike. Visit dropmark.com/teams to learn more.
###Upcoming Meetups:
San Francisco is coming up October 20 at Udemy
Austin is happening down November 10. Stay tuned for details!
###Featured Jobs
Blue Aunt Media needs a Senior UX Designer in Toronto
Pillpack is looking for a Product Designer in Boston
Reaktor is hiring a couple design positions in NY
ODEN Technologies is looking for a Product Designer in NY
MAARK Agency needs a UI Designer in Cambridge
Episode Highlights
The state of design tools: Thoughts on collaboration, file-sharing, features, layouts, and what all of this means for the industry as a whole [4:00]
Common issues that come up with collaborative design tools, and why design issues have become such a hot topic 7:10
The future of design tools: predictions 18:00
Fostering ultimate empathy for users, and what Randy discovered using only an iPad 21:40
How Randy’s background has brought him to where he is now, including how the early months of his launch went24:45
The differences between agency work and entrepreneurship 29:40
The differences between product work vs. service work 35:00
Challenges scaling the Etsy design team 39:20
Common challenges in management and how Randy meets them head-on 45:00
Etsy’s “secret sauce”: How they attract so many talented people 49:00
Feedback
We love (read: need) to hear your feedback. Tweet Sam or Designer News, or email us hello[at]designernews[dot]co.
59:46
Randy J. Hunt on true user-empathy and lessons learned growing Etsy
Episode in
DN FM
Randy J. Hunt joins us this week for a kaleidoscopic design discussion. He lays down all kinds of wisdom about developing true empathy for users, career paths, holistic design and business models. Then we explore Etsy; what it was like helming early design projects, challenges growing the team and how Etsy's mission attracts the calibre of designers it does. Finally, Randy name-drops the luminaries that he takes inspiration from.
Randy is the VP of Design at Etsy and author of Product Design for the Web. You can find him on Twitter at @randyjhunt.
Also: Payam Rajabi of Shopify and Kieran Rheaume of Designer News talk shop about the state of design tools as a number of new players like Figma, Subform and Affinity Designer emerge.
Sponsor
This week’s episode is brought to you by Dropmark. Dropmark is the smart way to organize all your links, files, and notes into visual collections, perfect for individuals and teams alike. Visit dropmark.com/teams to learn more.
###Upcoming Meetups:
San Francisco is coming up October 20 at Udemy
Austin is happening down November 10. Stay tuned for details!
###Featured Jobs
Blue Aunt Media needs a Senior UX Designer in Toronto
Pillpack is looking for a Product Designer in Boston
Reaktor is hiring a couple design positions in NY
ODEN Technologies is looking for a Product Designer in NY
MAARK Agency needs a UI Designer in Cambridge
Episode Highlights
The state of design tools: Thoughts on collaboration, file-sharing, features, layouts, and what all of this means for the industry as a whole [4:00]
Common issues that come up with collaborative design tools, and why design issues have become such a hot topic 7:10
The future of design tools: predictions 18:00
Fostering ultimate empathy for users, and what Randy discovered using only an iPad 21:40
How Randy’s background has brought him to where he is now, including how the early months of his launch went24:45
The differences between agency work and entrepreneurship 29:40
The differences between product work vs. service work 35:00
Challenges scaling the Etsy design team 39:20
Common challenges in management and how Randy meets them head-on 45:00
Etsy’s “secret sauce”: How they attract so many talented people 49:00
Feedback
We love (read: need) to hear your feedback. Tweet Sam or Designer News, or email us hello[at]designernews[dot]co.
59:46
Randy J. Hunt on true user-empathy and lessons learned growing Etsy
Episode in
DN FM
Randy J. Hunt joins us this week for a kaleidoscopic design discussion. He lays down all kinds of wisdom about developing true empathy for users, career paths, holistic design and business models. Then we explore Etsy; what it was like helming early design projects, challenges growing the team and how Etsy's mission attracts the calibre of designers it does. Finally, Randy name-drops the luminaries that he takes inspiration from.
Randy is the VP of Design at Etsy and author of Product Design for the Web. You can find him on Twitter at @randyjhunt.
Also: Payam Rajabi of Shopify and Kieran Rheaume of Designer News talk shop about the state of design tools as a number of new players like Figma, Subform and Affinity Designer emerge.
Sponsor
This week’s episode is brought to you by Dropmark. Dropmark is the smart way to organize all your links, files, and notes into visual collections, perfect for individuals and teams alike. Visit dropmark.com/teams to learn more.
Upcoming Meetups:
San Francisco is coming up October 20 at Udemy
Austin is happening down November 10. Stay tuned for details!
Featured Jobs
Blue Aunt Media needs a Senior UX Designer in Toronto
Pillpack is looking for a Product Designer in Boston
Reaktor is hiring a couple design positions in NY
ODEN Technologies is looking for a Product Designer in NY
MAARK Agency needs a UI Designer in Cambridge
Episode Highlights
The state of design tools: Thoughts on collaboration, file-sharing, features, layouts, and what all of this means for the industry as a whole [4:00]
Common issues that come up with collaborative design tools, and why design issues have become such a hot topic 7:10
The future of design tools: predictions 18:00
Fostering ultimate empathy for users, and what Randy discovered using only an iPad 21:40
How Randy’s background has brought him to where he is now, including how the early months of his launch went24:45
The differences between agency work and entrepreneurship 29:40
The differences between product work vs. service work 35:00
Challenges scaling the Etsy design team 39:20
Common challenges in management and how Randy meets them head-on 45:00
Etsy’s “secret sauce”: How they attract so many talented people 49:00
Feedback
We love (read: need) to hear your feedback. Tweet Sam or Designer News, or email us hello[at]designernews[dot]co.
59:46
Rachel Andrew on frameworks, layouts, and her humble CMS project going big
Episode in
DN FM
Rachel Andrew joins us this week to reflect on how the web's influence grew on her in the early days, and how this manifested into full-fledged web development - a magic skill set at the time. Then Rachel dwells on web frameworks and their implications for web standards and layouts. She muses about obligations for the development community to advocate for their interests, and the story of a humble CMS project turning big. Finally, she explores how the client landscape in today's web dev world is shifting and becoming commoditized.
Rachel is a developer, speaker, author, and founder of Perch, a friendly CMS client.
Sponsor
This episode of DN FM is sponsored by Peel, the original branding free, super thin iPhone case. It's designed to protect your device without losing its aesthetic - use the code “DN7” for 10% off your order!
Community Announcements
In addition to the badge sorting options we added last week, there is a new Submit Story flow that makes posting easier. As always, reach out to Jody if you run into any trouble or have feedback.
Featured Listings
Sprout Video is looking for a Creative Director in Brooklyn
Weebly needs a Design Manager in San Francisco
###Upcoming Meetups:
San Francisco is coming up October 20 - stay tuned for more details.
###Featured Jobs
Weebly needs a Design Manager in San Francisco
Episode Highlights
Leaving the world of theater and dance (3:30)
How buying her first computer opened up a new career for Rachel (4:10)
Writing about the Web and nailing first client-gigs (5:45)
Creating, building, and curiosity-driven programming (7:36)
What about CSS is so exciting? (8:55)
CSS frameworks and web developments (11:15)
Relying on frameworks and implications for the web (12:50)
Pushing for better standards (14:25)
Launching and marketing Perch (16:15)
Transitioning from a studio to a product company (19:20)
Why traditional design companies are pitching more web products (23:10)
The balancing act of sharing free resources and making revenue from projects (from The High Price of Free) (25:00)
Feedback
We love (read: need) to hear your feedback. Tweet Sam or Designer News, or email us hello[at]designernews[dot]co.
29:45
Rachel Andrew on frameworks, layouts, and her humble CMS project going big
Episode in
DN FM
Rachel Andrew joins us this week to reflect on how the web's influence grew on her in the early days, and how this manifested into full-fledged web development - a magic skill set at the time. Then Rachel dwells on web frameworks and their implications for web standards and layouts. She muses about obligations for the development community to advocate for their interests, and the story of a humble CMS project turning big. Finally, she explores how the client landscape in today's web dev world is shifting and becoming commoditized.
Rachel is a developer, speaker, author, and founder of Perch, a friendly CMS client.
Sponsor
This episode of DN FM is sponsored by Peel, the original branding free, super thin iPhone case. It's designed to protect your device without losing its aesthetic - use the code “DN7” for 10% off your order!
Community Announcements
In addition to the badge sorting options we added last week, there is a new Submit Story flow that makes posting easier. As always, reach out to Jody if you run into any trouble or have feedback.
Featured Listings
Sprout Video is looking for a Creative Director in Brooklyn
Weebly needs a Design Manager in San Francisco
###Upcoming Meetups:
San Francisco is coming up October 20 - stay tuned for more details.
###Featured Jobs
Weebly needs a Design Manager in San Francisco
Episode Highlights
Leaving the world of theater and dance (3:30)
How buying her first computer opened up a new career for Rachel (4:10)
Writing about the Web and nailing first client-gigs (5:45)
Creating, building, and curiosity-driven programming (7:36)
What about CSS is so exciting? (8:55)
CSS frameworks and web developments (11:15)
Relying on frameworks and implications for the web (12:50)
Pushing for better standards (14:25)
Launching and marketing Perch (16:15)
Transitioning from a studio to a product company (19:20)
Why traditional design companies are pitching more web products (23:10)
The balancing act of sharing free resources and making revenue from projects (from The High Price of Free) (25:00)
Feedback
We love (read: need) to hear your feedback. Tweet Sam or Designer News, or email us hello[at]designernews[dot]co.
29:45
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