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Simplicity Rules

Adam DuVander on keeping it simple

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Simplicity killed the productivity star

August 15, 2006 by Adam DuVander

Yes, sometimes things can be too simple. But why?

I’m reading Ready for Anything by Getting Things Done author David Allen. Allen has a good point about how too simple can go wrong:

To-do “lists haven’t worked because they were an attempt to compress very different and discrete functions into one event and context. If you try to make something too simple, it will make everything seem more complex and difficult. Yes, we’ve all been up against the wall of too many things screaming at us in our head, and we’ve gotten temporary relief by ‘making a list.’ But these Band-Aids don’t work as an ongoing strategy.”

Recently Noah Kagan inspired some good discussion about the return on time. A few of us posted tips in the comments. Stuff I try tends to be time compression tricks, such as the Power Hour and the four day week.

But those are tricks. And tricks tend not to work forever. Just like the to-do list provides only temporary relief.

So far, Ready for Anything seems a little more accessible than Getting Things Done, perhaps because it’s in list form (subtitle: “52 productivity principles for work & life”). Hopefully I’ll find not just useful tricks, but something lasting that helps me discover what is important to me and how to accomplish it.

See also: Elliot’s personal prioritizing formula.

The real new Web

August 14, 2006 by Adam DuVander

Back in the old days of the Web, I said something like “everyone should have a Web page.” It was part of my senior thesis on making it easy to publish. At the same time, I was actively poo-pooing blogs. What can I say, I’m a hypocrite.

Because it was the early Web, I don’t even have proof that I was so far ahead of my time, because I never wrote it down. While I understood the Web was a forum for self-expression, I didn’t go far enough with it. I thought it was a place to put your silly photologues or carefully crafted open letters.

The real new Web is quick, off-the-cuff self-expresion. That’s where real people exist.

Checking in on At the End of the Day, I read this rant (may contain bad grammar and the occasional curse word) from a 15-year-old Live Journal user. It made me smile, because I might finally get it.

At the end of the day, a flight delayed is a mashup made

August 8, 2006 by Adam DuVander

For what it’s worth, I’m not usually one for cliches. It’s like there’s no there there, only on steroids.

After watching my nephews, I was stranded at the airport for an extra five hours Sunday night. There was plenty of actual work I could have done, but instead I decided to pound out this site:

At The End Of The Day – Cream of the cliche crop

This grabs items from Yahoo! News and Google Blogsearch that contain the cliched phrase “at the end of the day.” That’s it. There really isn’t any there here. But it was fun and it makes me giggle. And here’s an easy way to show up on ATEOTD… put the phrase in a blog post!

According to a tool I use to track my domain ideas, I first looked up ateotd.com on June 8. I did it again on July 23. I registered the domain July 25. And now I’m announcing it August 8. I’m agile, baby!

And the project was truly bootstrapped. Funded soley by the $6 food voucher from Alaska Airlines (sandwiches cost $9), I worked quickly, releasing early and often.

There’s room for other cliches on ATEOTD. Some of them I’ve used in this post. If you have favorites, write them in the comments and you may see it added, because at the end of the day, it’s other people’s ideas that I value most.

Designing for Social Sharing

August 8, 2006 by Adam DuVander

I have been eagerly awaiting one set of slides from Webvisions and now they’re available: Rashmi Sinha’s Designing for Social Sharing. Her talk was referenced in three other sessions that I attended, so this is thought-leader kind of stuff.

Unlike many sets of conference slides, these are easy to read (like last year’s How to make a zillion dollars and not lose your soul) without attending the talk. Her talk had so many wonderful things, it’s hard to digest them at once. I’ll probably have to revisit these slides several times.

Here’s a sneak peak of some of it…

    Why is now the time for social sharing?

  1. The Web has become a social sphere. There is over 50% broadband penetration in the U.S., and 65% of people use the Internet to maintain friendships.
  2. Massively multi-player online games. You’re playing and interacting.
  3. Rich interfaces enable richer interactions. Sites can provide a stream of real-time content, as opposed to a snapshot of some prior moment.
    Some principles for social sharing
    (including some of my social website rules)

  1. Make system personally useful
  2. Identify symbiotic relationship between personal and social
  3. Create porous boundary between public and private
  4. Allow for levels of participation
  5. Let people feel the presence of others
  6. But design for moments of independence

To find out details on any of these points, or see other great stuff I’ve left out, check out her slides.

Why global navigation is so important

August 7, 2006 by Adam DuVander

Lots of links, but not one home pageLately I’ve noticed something eerie as I go to type in the home URL of some of my favorite sites. My browser’s history, which goes back nine days, does not remember the home page. As we trend away from home page supremacy, global navigation becomes all the more important.

Derek Powazek has a three point plan for planning the most crucial element of your user interface:

  1. Never, ever link to the page you’re on
  2. Show where you are
  3. Think before you link

Searching and other content filters (like RSS) are only going to become more prevalent. We can’t count on visitors streaming in our front door. We have to be ready for them climbing in the windows, or walking up from the basement.

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Simplicity Series

  • Designing the Obvious
  • Paradox of Choice
  • Laws of Simplicity

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