Brian Feeney
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Cutesy Design

I’m in total agreement with this article deriding the nature of cuteness in so much of the software and products we use today.

“We’re in the middle of a decade of post-dignity design, whose dogma is cuteness. One explanation would be geopolitical: when the perception of instability is elevated, we seek the safety of naptime aesthetics.”

Ben Chestnut pushed this esthetic with Mailchimp, and wrote a book about it. I actually happen to be smitten with Freddie, the company’s mascot, and how he is used in the overall brand. The trend caught on like wildfire, however, and now so many apps feature illustrated animals hidden among the edges.

The popularity of Tumblr, gifs, and emojis has pushed them into the world of marketing. It really does infantilize the world we live in. There are plenty of sad reasons for why my generation feels a little less like the adults we figured we’d be by now. I’d prefer brands refrain from assuming it’s all a joke worth marketing upon.

August 03, 2016

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Homes for This Gen

This article in Curbed is the first I’ve seen to correctly diagnose the home-buying difficulties my generation is facing.

Homebuilders also aren’t responding to the needs and updated preferences of millennials fast enough to meet the demands of a group entering prime homebuying years. While many expect the millennial preference for cities to remain unchanged, even those moving to the suburbs desire aspects of that urban layout and lifestyle.

“Millennials want walkability and convenience,” says Ducker. “They have a higher transit use propensity than those in the past, and they want to be within walking distance of shopping and dining. The problem with the existing suburban housing stock in America is that it just doesn’t provide that.”

There are plenty of places in the US to live, but developers need to start building homes and neighborhoods which match our minimum requirements. I really can’t see my peers moving into most neighborhoods built during the last 30 years. The over-sized houses, absolute lack of style, and intentional disconnect from any town center are all major deficiencies. I intend to own a home one day, but it seems the number of existing homes I’d consider acceptable is very very small.

August 01, 2016

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After Twitter

The more I think about it, the more ready I become for the end of Twitter. If it went away, I, personally, would not be so terribly inconvenienced. I would lose a few things, but I’d gain others, too. I’d gain back time. I would put greater emphasis on articles and books in my life. I might even write more. There are conceivable benefits of a world without Twitter.

But what about what we lose. We lose a very important online town square. We lose a chunk of free political discourse. We lose trustworthy, second-by-second real-time breaking news. We lose diversity in voices.

Can these lost things be found again in blogs? Are there other platforms for less privileged voices to ring out? I suspect the answer will be “no” on both accounts for a long while.

What I want to build is something which exists in that world between RSS readers, personal blogs, and Twitter.

February 06, 2016

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End of Twitter, Feb 2016 Edition

News is breaking that Twitter is rolling out an algorithmically sorted timeline. An algorithmic Twitter is an I’ll-check-it-once-a-week-for 5-minutes Twitter. I wonder if it would even feel trustworthy in the case of a tragic disaster, the kind that seems to happen a few times a year. If I feel like Twitter is trying to show me relevant content instead of simply allowing the news to flow, I don’t think I would rely on it for info. But where else would I go? What are we supposed to do? Just let it go, I guess. Back to 2006.

Tweetbot has been a refuge. In fact, if it weren’t for Tweetbot, I likely would have stopped reading Twitter altogether. The official app is a mess, already out of order and impossible to grok. It feels uncomfortable, like socks which won’t stay up, or a too-small-sweater.

I’ve been preparing myself for the end for a long time. It seems obvious third party apps won’t be around for ever. Eventually we’d all have to use the official app. I check it occasionally, but it’s a horrible experience, and I always feel less anxious after closing it. If I had to use their app, I would just not bother.

I’m not really a social person. Not really an over-sharer. Twitter and Instagram made it easy for me for awhile, but something has changed. I feel less comfortable with social networks in general. Personal, private blogging feels much more my style.

Feels like Twitter is almost over. It really does this time.

February 05, 2016

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Mind of Winter

One must have a mind of winter
To regard the frost and the boughs
Of the pine-trees crusted with snow;

For the listener, who listens in the snow,
And, nothing himself, beholds
Nothing that is not there and the nothing that is.

— Wallace Stevens

January 31, 2016

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RSS by Time of Day

I use Feedly for my RSS reading and I believe I’ve found my favorite way to sort through the news. Last fall, I arranged my feeds into time of day: Morning, Afternoon, Evening, Night, Weekend, and Work Reading. Most feeds are in multiple folders, and few are in less than two. It’s a very easy way to run through what’s happening out there in the world. At particular times during the day, I’m more interested in certain kinds of news. In the morning, I want to read national news and the personal blog posts from friends and colleagues. In the afternoon, I like all forms of news, including entertainment and trivial stuff. In the evening, the longer form articles are more interesting. At night and in the weekends, I’d rather read lifestyle stuff and to give myself a break from the think pieces and awful politics. At work, I just want to read stuff that pertains to my career, so that stuff is quarantined to office hours.

All in all, it really works. I get through my feeds quickly but without rushing. I know if I leave 50 posts in the morning list, the timely stuff I’ll likely get to later in the day. And when I want to take a real break from RSS, I check only my Vacation folder: about 20 feeds which entertain me more than inform me; a breezy list.

There is a lot of work to do in making RSS products into the forms they deserve to be. At least now I feel I’ve cracked a personal code.

January 26, 2016

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Raising Boys and Girls

From an article in the Atlantic by Debbie Chachra:

“A quote often attributed to Gloria Steinem says: “We’ve begun to raise daughters more like sons . . . but few have the courage to raise our sons more like our daughters.” Maker culture, with its goal to get everyone access to the traditionally male domain of making, has focused on the first. But its success means that it further devalues the traditionally female domain of caregiving, by continuing to enforce the idea that only making things is valuable. Rather, I want to see us recognize the work of the educators, those that analyze and characterize and critique, everyone who fixes things, all the other people who do valuable work with and for others — above all, the caregivers whose work isn’t about something you can put in a box and sell.

January 24, 2016

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Percents and Percents

I’m really tired of reading articles with paragraphs full of sentences like, “[This Percent] of [this demographic] believes this while [This Percent] of [this demographic] believes that.” Am I reading more press release type articles now, or is this a lame, lazy trend that’s growing?

January 16, 2016

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January 13, 2016

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Sunset of Social Media?

I’ve stopped visiting Pinterest. It’s been weeks or months since I’ve been in the habit of looking through the site. At least six months since I tried keeping up to date with my stream. I’ve reached a saturation point with visual inspiration. I’m on the other end of the pendulum swing: I need to be making things.

I’ve also rarely kept up with Twitter, and mostly that’s just my short list of people I most care about. Instagram has lost its grip on me. Facebook I stopped reading well over a year or go, or two.

It’s the end of social networks for me. I’m over them. The other things which really matter to me anymore are blogs and long-reads. It’s why I’m so obsessed with building an RSS reader. It’s another world out there outside the walled garden of social apps. It’s a bigger world, and far more interesting.

January 12, 2016

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