Archive for May, 2010

On Growth

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Have you ever tried to raise a plant? Or a pet? It’s nearly impossible to do so without quite a lot of work, and continuous work at that! You can’t stop watering a plant or feeding a pet and expect it to continue to grow (or live).

Every aspect of our lives follows the same principles. You don’t become an expert at something without long and steady practice (Malcom Gladwell says 10,000 hours). Friendships and loves don’t just happen, they are the result of patient and conscious effort. Popping into church once or twice a year doesn’t make you religious.

Frankly, you don’t get to control who you become without first deciding who you want to be. Lewis Carroll puts it this way (paraphrased from Alice in Wonderland), “If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will take you there.”

Seth Godin refers to the human urge to abandon a project right before the moment of full commitment as “Lizard Brain” and argues that it must be overcome to accomplish something meaningful. Avoiding commitment is a coward’s way of never having to change. Never having to grow. After all, if you never commit to something, you’ll never to have to sacrifice for it.

Tweet 14771981036

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Thanks to everyone who replied to our designer/developer question! Of respondents: 16% designer, 16% developer, 66% both.

“Better Font Stacks” now available in Belorussian (translation by Patricia Clausnitzer)

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Tweet 14313353069

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Do you consider yourself a designer, developer or both? If neither, what then? Gathering some data and will share later.

Tweet 14237860970

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Unify 1.3 is up! Lots of great new features and improvements: http://bit.ly/1Q6hF9 PLEASE NOTE: 1.3 requires a manual update!

It’s a Calling

Monday, May 17th, 2010

There’s a reason that some of the most stressful and vital jobs in society come with disproportionately low salaries. These sorts of jobs, like law enforcement officer, pastor, teacher, soldier…they are vital to our society and yet the people who pursue these sorts of careers are often quite willing to accept the comparatively low pay that comes with them. This doesn’t seem to make sense until you recognize that they’re often not so much career choices as callings.

When you believe you are called to pursue a particular line of work, answering that calling provides a level of fulfillment and compensation in your life that works to make up for lacking monetary compensation. Those pursuing their callings find contentment that diminishes the overt desire to demand the highest salaries. The market rightly responds to this fact by modifying salaries downward. This is not to say that people in these professions cannot rise above the average level of compensation, but even at the lower levels of pay those answering a calling will continue to do yeoman’s work with little or no promise of increased financial gain. Sadly, this characteristic can leave individuals or whole professions ripe for exploitation.

The ones who soon begin to balk and accumulate bitterness at the seeming injustice in this arrangement make clear that they see their profession not as a calling, but as a job. I’m not trying to make value judgments here, but I think the observation is accurate.

I think that design fits comfortably into the list of professions that many perceive as a calling rather than merely a career choice. This is true for many of the designers I know and it is true for me. This is what I’m supposed to be doing and I will not choose to do anything other than pursue my current profession. I and others I know have sacrificed much in order to do so. This is not something one does for a mere job.

Designers can be highly-paid, but this is the exception rather than the norm. Although I chafe at the needless indignity of the fact, many designers endure ridiculous circumstances and ugly, myopic, or gravely-unhealthy company culture—often for embarrassingly-low wages—all so that they can continue to pursue their calling. I don’t mean to say that it’s entirely healthy to do this, but those pursuing a calling will do so and complain little.

As I’ve mentioned before, I think there’s a difference between those working on a career and those pursuing their calling. What are you pursuing?

The New Unify Community

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Unify – our little content editing app – has begun to hit its stride, so it was about time we gave it a space to really stretch its legs. Last Thursday, we launched a redesigned and realigned version of our Unify Support site, focused on community involvement.

The forums on Unify Support are not new, but this redesign represents our new commitment to the community that is growing around our product. We hope that this will spur thought, innovation, and excitement about Unify, but we also hope it will be a direct line for complaints or requests.

Until this launch, we tried paying minimal attention to the forums as we preferred direct ticket submissions for bugs and requests. Not so anymore. We will be in the forums, openly engaging with everyone that has a question about Unify. The Community will become a resource of its own, with answers only a search away.

So, we hope you like what we’ve done with the place. We have created a special thread for comments and requests about the new Unify Community, so please share and share often.

A Community redesign is one of those good kind of problems, so thank you to our customers for helping us get here.

Tweet 13929385844

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Just Launched – New Unify Support Site + revamped Community: http://bit.ly/59VI2i Check it out! #unify #verse

Recommended
Most Popular
Underappreciated