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Mad Men: Season 6, Episode 8: The Crash
I feel like the entire, insane episode was summed up perfectly by this line.
Easily the best line of the episode. Helped tie everything together oh so well.
Tumblr & Human-scale Design
Lots of the chatter this morning is on the $1.1B headline, or the story of Marissa’s Yahoo, or Tumblr’s massive growth & relevance to youth, or New York’s continuing emergence on the world’s tech stage.
But I want to talk about something else that I find remarkable about Tumblr, even today, after about 2 years of working with the team there. What I find remarkable about the company is that it continues to design and build products that are human scale.
I’ll describe what I mean with an architecture analogy — most of the houses that we all live in are human scale. They’re built to fit the way we live. As you build bigger & bigger buildings, sometimes houses, sometimes public structures, they tend to focus more on “being architecture” or accommodating very large groups of people, or showing off. It’s the rare big public space that can relate to normal humans — they just outgrow us at some point.
That’s why we love the buildings that can relate — one of which, appropriately enough, is Grand Central Station in New York.
With digital interfaces, as you get big — and Tumblr, with it’s 105 million blogs and 300 million visitors each month is, decidedly, massive — you tend to lose your human scale, too. Interfaces get cluttered with new features & competing priorities — they tend to let the organization of the builders show through as opposed to the primacy of the user. Or they can become super precious, designed for hanging in a museum instead of daily use.
What I’ve loved about working with Tumblr is that they’ve kept this human scale in every aspect of the product. You can see it in the dashboard UI, you can see it in the creation tools, you can see it in the way they communicate with users, and most of all you can see it in their lineup of mobile products. It’s all just fundamentally more human in aspect than anything I’ve ever seen at this scale.
Here’s an example (of something they shipped today!) in their mobile interface:
The wonderful thing about that very small interaction (creating a new post) is that it matches the way your thumb moves across the screen, from bottom right to top left. It’s a tiny nuance that just fits right. There are hundreds of touches like this across everything that Tumblr makes.
It’s a testament not only to David, who’s a wonderfully smart & thoughtful designer & builder, but the whole team there, including folks I’ve been lucky to work with like Derek, Ari, Peter, Bryan, John & others. And also to Bijan Sabet from Spark Capital, who first convinced David to really go for it, and really grokked the product very early (like he’s done many times at this point!) — thanks for the introduction to the team, Bijan!
The picture above sort of sums it up for me — I took that picture in Tumblr’s elevator lobby when I was there for December’s board meeting. It was just so perfect, so understated, so elegant — so human.
For those who don’t know the reference, it’s from A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965) — Charlie Brown is sent out to get a Christmas tree, and this is what he brings back, despite the fact that the lot was full of bigger, shinier, nicer trees:
But Charlie & Linus took a chance on the smaller, more organic, more human tree. They got a lot of grief from their friends for not picking the shinier ones, naturally. But Linus put his blanket around the tree, and they all started taking care of it, decorating it, coaxing it into life.
And what they got at the end was this:
Clearly superior, in my view, and clearly human.
Congratulations to the whole team at Tumblr for the accomplishment, and for building such a massive global phenomenon, but in a way that’s so fundamentally human scale. That’s something to be awfully proud of. Looking forward to watching you humanize even more of our digital lives.
Great analogy.
View my 4 latest photos on Flickr: http://flic.kr/u/Bi9t7/aHsjF9Trok
The end.
All I know is that every time I’ve been faced with a tough decision There’s only one thing that outweighs every other concern One thing that will make you give up on everything you thought you knew Every instinct, every rational calculation Love
Words to live by.
Throwback Ad of the Day: Shaqta Claus
(via fatshawnkemp)
This one is to my girlfriend...
Look at that, the "GM" got me pumped for Raw again
Because it’s HBK.
They are in San Antonio, after all, and that’s his hometown…
It's gotta be HBK
Santino and Kozlov for tag champs
If the booking logic holds, I’ll only be subjected to them for 15 seconds every week.
Poor Hart Dynasty.
The whole past 20 mins has been filler. Horrible wasted time. Throw Nexus out there more like NWO with Nitro
(via ringsidereview)
Week 1
So week 1 of my internship is complete, and I've already learned tons (like the power of social media).
I still have lots to learn though.
I went into week 1 with no expectations to what to expect from a new atmosphere, with new faces, in a new place. I learned one thing, change happens, and you need to be able to adapt to change in order to succeed.
That is one of the biggest things i need to learn: how to adapt to change.
This internship is more than just a job, its an experience, and I will learn new things everyday.
The work load is heavy, but nothing I can't do. I love the personality in the office, never a dull moment, and tons of different perspectives which I hope will help improve my thinking process. My supporting cast makes the day go by quick, even when its the hottest days of the year.
I feel like I am catching on quick with everything I am responsible for and I love the added responsibilities that I have, now that I am in a full-time capacity in the minor leagues.
I still think I want to work in Major League Baseball, but after the end of this season at Tri-City, my dreams and goals might differ.
So week 1 is over and week 2 starts Tuesday, bright and early, with the Myers-Briggs test. I wonder if I am an extrovert or an introvert?
Signing off-
Ron Johnson
At The Bottom