1. image: Download

    Who inspires you?

    Who inspires you?

    (Source: iqstorm)

  2. via minimalmac.com

    Here is a piece of history. Steve Jobs circa 1997, in his prime and introducing the “Think Different” campaign, talking about branding and communicating the brand message.

    One of my favourite parts is in the beginning:
    “To me marketing is about values. This is a very complicated world, it’s a very noisy world. We’re not going to get a chance to get people to remember much about us, no company is. So we have to be very clear on what we want them to know about us.”

    “One of greatest jobs of marketing that the universe has ever seen is Nike. Remember, Nike sold a commodity. They sell shoes and yet when you think of Nike, you feel something different than a shoes company. In their ads, if you know, they don’t even talk about the product. They don’t ever tell you about their airsoles and why they are better than Reebok’s airsoles.  What is Nike doing in advertising? They honor great athelets and they honor great athletics. That’s who they are and that’s what they are about. Apple spends a fortune on advertising, you’ve never known it.”

    “Who is Apple and what is that we stand for? Where do we fit in this world? What we’re about isn’t making boxes for people to get their jobs done, although we do that well. “

    The answer to these last questions can be found at the end of the video.

    (check out his shorts. That’s a statement that he’s different. :) )

    PS. Yes, I’m aware of the shameless arrogance, Apple promotion and marketing messages sprinkled in his talk.

    (Source: youtube.com)

  3. I do remember those days.

  4. IE6, the primordial soup is getting cold.

    IE 6 crawled out of the primordial soup 8 years go, at the peak of the dot-com boom. Compared to it’s predecesor, it improved CSS support and for the box model. Nice of MS to do that !

    The user didn’t have much of choice. Browsers were still something understood by very few. I heard about Netscape, but that blue “e” on the desktop was still easier to use and seemed to do it’s job, which was enough for my 13 year old brain, at that time. IE6 peaked at ~90% market share in 2002 and 2003.

    As the interweb trend evolved, some other alternatives came, but IE still seemed to do it’s job and that’s the quality standard for most of the population. Besides this reason, there is the fact that IE came already with Windoze. “Why bother with terms like updating and heavy processes as making shortcuts, when that blue “e” is already on my desktop and it’s doing it’s job ?”. This is why all the big companies bought Windoze and got IE6 for free. Suddenly that hot blonde secretary or the old accounting lady were using IE6, w/o knowing, caring or willing. Only the tech-guy had Netscape.

    Visionaries were pushing the limits and IE6 started to get old. As the internet evolved, the need for rules and standards rose. It’s easier when everybody talks the same language.

    Since 8 years ago IE6 still has that 6 at the end. You can ignore the following service packs (SP), because that 6 still remained there.

    In typical MS style, developing a website for IE6 is pretty mysterious. It doesn’t follow W3 standards completely, a pixel is not actually a pixel and there is no feedback for developers.

    IT industry is not as old as other industries, but 8 years is a decent lifespan for any industry. Dragging it’s lifespan will just make it worse for MS. I’m sure MS is smart enough to know this problem and how to solve it. Maybe they need some help, so I’m willing to give them a hand. From today onward I decided to drop all support for IE6 and prompt these poor IE6 users to upgrade their browsers. By this, users will have an alternative.

    As an UI developer, I can leave my ego aside and not ask for the cutting edge stuff, like CSS3, HTML5, but working with a coleague who’s mute is making me have grey hair.

    Thank you IE6 for showing me the internet. Don’t overstay your welcome. Rest in peace !