Wow! Fluid has been updated to support WebKit2. Looking forward to having this back in my life.
Wow! Fluid has been updated to support WebKit2. Looking forward to having this back in my life.
Hi, my name is Brad and I’m addicted to browser tabs. I have no idea how many I have open right now. Maybe hundreds. Who says web discovery is dead?
Stop the madness by Michael Tsai. Love this. I don’t use Safari as my main browser, but if I did…
I’m a massive fan of the music and culture of Ghostly. They have an awesome new site. Really loving the design. They even have a blog post with the team that did the redesign that was super interesting. I particularly love the catalog numbers and archive feel of everything.
70 of the Most Useful Websites on the Internet
There goes my evening.
We used to have a map of a frontier that could be anything. The web isn’t young anymore, though. It’s settled. It’s been prospected and picked through. Increasingly, it feels like we decided to pave the wilderness, turn it into a suburb, and build a mall. And I hate this map of the web, because it only describes a fraction of what it is and what’s possible. We’ve taken an opportunity for connection and distorted it to commodify attention. That’s one of the sleaziest things you can do.
I think the web is heading towards an age of anthologies, where users gain new ways to select, sequence, and publish the content they come in contact with online. Some of these will be automated like Flipboard or Facebook’s timeline, but I’m more interested in the design opportunities of the manual tools that require our attention to pass over what we’ve reaped from the web. These anthologies are more than a flat stream or cursory pass over an exhaust of data. They are experiences and content chosen by the user to be shared in a certain sequence for a certain effect. The arrangements have edges, and fly against the nature of the web, simply in that one may “finish.”