Hide Your iPod, Here Comes Bill
Wednesday, February 2, 2005 10: 51 AM
Hide Your iPod, Here Comes Bill. Great Wired article on the popularity and politics of iPods at Microsoft's headquarters.
Hi. I'm Paul Nixon, a designer living in Mountain View California. My days (and some nights) are spent designing websites for a little company in Cupertino. The rest of my time is spent with my beautiful wife and friends, road cycing and reading your blogs.
Wednesday, February 2, 2005 10: 51 AM
Hide Your iPod, Here Comes Bill. Great Wired article on the popularity and politics of iPods at Microsoft's headquarters.
Monday, January 31, 2005 09: 06 AM
iSnip. "A new freeware application (For OS X) that allows users to manage and edit a collection of text clippings that can be easily accessed from a system wide menu." It also pastes the stored text automatically into any application when it's selected from the drop down menu. Handy.
Wednesday, January 26, 2005 01: 40 PM
Scrivs at 9rules buys a Mac. Asks designers for software advice. Lots of good recommendations in the comments.
Wednesday, January 19, 2005 01: 45 AM
Some excellent reviews of the iPod shuffle for new users and power users at iPodlounge. My friend Matt has already ordered one to add to his collection. My sister is considering one and she's never owned an iPod. Friends and co-workers are buzzing. Certainly another hit for Apple. John at Daring Fireball some great thoughts on all this. ...read more
Some more random thoughts:
Friday, January 14, 2005 02: 45 PM
Comments are finally live on the Apple's Tipping Point post. Feel free to add a few words if you feel so inclined. Thanks to everyone for the many links and kind words. With over 20,000 page views of the graphic so far, I have just sat back in awe at how quickly a concept can spread from paper to digital to the online world at large. Simply amazing.
The irony of the whole thing is that I was reading this Fast Company article: The Accidental Guru at lunch about Malcolm Gladwell, author of The Tipping Point, when I started thinking about tipping points, MacWorld and Apple -- then I reached for the sketch book to put ideas to paper. Makes me wonder about the interconnectedness of various, seemingly unrelated tipping points...