Check out our new Happiness Feed. Real-Time status on how we’re delivering happiness to @toutapp customers.
Putting in the time and effort required to really understand the market is what can separate the big successes from those that find themselves floundering into the deadpool. — http://techcrunch.com/2012/05/14/vcs-at-work-the-anatomy-of-a-killer-startup/
Which sites do you keep pinned in Chrome?
I have: GCal, Gmail, Tout and Basecamp.
I saw this photo in a recent article about New York City. It was titled “Never-before-seen photos from 100 years ago tell vivid story of gritty New York City”
As I went through the pictures, most of which show a faintly familiar cityscape, I thought to myself. Wow, how exciting it must’ve been for them. At that time (1936), people just kept looking around and saw massive amounts of “building” taking place. Building bridges, building skyscrapers, roads, infrastructure. It must’ve felt so full of energy.
In a way, they were lucky. They could feel, touch, and hear all the hustle and bustle of progress happening.
Today, I like to think that the same amount of progress is happening. Except, you can’t necessarily feel or touch or hear it. It’s just bits flying through our iPhones and our air and our minds. Its all invisible.
Invisible progress. But with the same amount of energy, ambition, and might.
blog subscribe buttons: so old school!
If you take everyone that used @ToutApp today, sum up all the time they spent on the site TODAY (so far), you get:
The Nokia 8800 is still one of the most beautiful phones I’ve ever owned.
People who try to copy my approach usually fail. They typically give up within a few months. Why? Because they’re not really copying my approach. My approach wasn’t to copy someone else’s approach, so if they copy my approach, then that wasn’t actually my approach. Get it? — Steve Pavlina, on how to deal with copycat competition.
Old is new again.
We are hiring a front end hacker. Join the @toutapp adventure. http://www1.toutapp.com/jobs/front-end-developer