6 Oct
2011

“Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma – which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of other’s opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.” — Steve Jobs. R.I.P.

(Source: mr-xs-world)

tags / steve / jobs / steve jobs / apple / iphone / ipod / microsoft / quote / quotes / be yourself / amazing / R.I.P / 2011 / Ipad
26 Jul
2011
35 Free User Interface Kits for Mobile and Web Designers | SpyreStudios

nice collection of UI PSDs for mobile designers

tags / mobile / iphone / design / photoshop / mobility 10 notes | Permalink
10 Nov
2010
[Flash 10 is required to watch video]

Elkingfawkes Fireworks at High Speed

tags / stop-motion / photography / iphone / fireworks / halloween Permalink
7 Jul
2010
Hafencity, Hamburg

Hafencity, Hamburg

tags / hamburg / germany / hafencity / iphone 1 note | Permalink
12 Feb
2010
The fan-funded model that led to a major record deal

Interesting article from The Guardian on fan-funded commercial music models. Is this the future of the music industry?

tags / music / record labels / records / fans / itunes / iphone / apple / music industry Permalink
9 Jan
2010

Startup success is about ‘enduring agility’

Looking back at the technology startups and apps that survived and thrived in 2009 it struck me that the companies doing well 1-2 years into their launch are the ones that were really the most agile and continued to evolve and integrate with continuous and insatiable enthusiasm.

Thanks to http://www.flickr.com/photos/cdm/

2009 was all about integrating your platform with the big networks and technologies - Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, iPhone, etc. But success for many startups was not about the feature list they had when they launched, but how much they keep adapting after that. The winners clearly had a kind of ‘enduring agility’.

The launch of a new app, web service or startup is clearly just the beginning of a long fight to get to that first and second round of funding. But the bottom line is it takes endurance for a startup to keep adapting and coming back over and over again with increasingly tuned product features. You need time, money and and a team with plenty of gutsy enthusiasm.

Think about the dozens of new launches that hit the pages of TechCrunch and VentureBeat on a daily basis. There is plenty of choice for almost any kind of web service or app you need. But whether your talking about photo apps, travel apps, news apps, or social media apps, it’s difficult to really ‘seperate the men from the boys’ until you start using the service and really understand how it meets your needs as the customer.

Even the best app on day 1 is going to fall short of customer’s expectations simply because it’s new (probably a beta launch) and may not have simply had that much customer exposure during testing. The startups that realise the launch is only the starting line, are the ones that are primed to keep running and keep iterating - release after release.

So in a world flooded with hundreds of overnight successes and failures, let’s just say the ‘new success’ is all about consideration, iteration and good old fashioned perspiration.

tags / iphone / startup / startups / apps / app store / tech startup / social media / web services / agility / facebook / twitter / flickr / android / success / web 2.0 / enterprise 2.0 / api
4 Jan
2010

How to present like Steve Jobs…oh yeah

Check out this great presentation on how to develop a super zen presentation style like Steve Jobs. He works hard at it but ultimately it comes down to taking a structured, focussed approach to telling a compelling story that the audience love from beginning to end.

As Jobs says himself, ‘simplicity is the ultimate sophistication’.

The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs

View more presentations from Carmine Gallo.

Note the link here to Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers, which theorises that people at the top are there because they work hard and have on average put in a hell of a lot of hours to get there. Read more on ‘The 10,000 Hour Rule’.

tags / apple / imac / iphone / keynote / macworld / microsoft / personal development / presentation technique / steve jobs / gladwell / outliers
29 Apr
2009

10 Useful resources for iPhone developers

So I’ve starting looking into iPhone development, coming from a background in Ruby on Rails, Flash and a little PHP.

Any other useful ‘get started’ links? Please let me know. Good luck! tags / apple / gaming / iphone / iphone games / iphone app / iphone development / home automation / app store
28 Apr
2009

I’m getting started in iPhone development

Having been a fledgling Rails developer for 3 years now I’m taking the plunge into the iPhone app world. Clearly everyone’s at it. With the announcement that Hulu will launch their own iphone app shortly how long before the BBC launch their own iPlayer app?

The app store has hit 1 billion downloads. Everyone’s loving it. Time to jump on the bandwagon too. Woohoo!

So I’m heading to the Apple Developer’s Wiki to get started. And I’m studying what apps didn’t make it to the app store and were rejected.

tags / apple / bbc / iphone / iplayer / hulu / iphone app / ruby on rails